Electronic waste (e-waste) is a well-known source of plastic additives in the environment. However, the e-waste-related occupational exposure to organophosphite antioxidants (OPAs) and the relevant oxidation products-novel organophosphate esters (NOPEs)-via different pathways is still unknown. In this study, six OPAs and three NOPEs were measured in 116 dust and 43 hand-wipe samples from an e-waste dismantling area in Central China. The median concentrations of ΣOPAs and ΣNOPEs were 188 and 13,900ng·g-1 in workshop dust and 5,250ng·m-2 and 53,600ng·m-2 on workers' hands, respectively. The increasing concentrations of dust in the form of triphenyl phosphate (TPHP) (p<0.01) and tris(2,4-di-tert-butylphenyl) phosphate (AO168=O) (p<0.05) were strongly associated with the corresponding concentration on workers' hands. Furthermore, men had significantly lower levels of NOPEs on their hands than did women (p<0.01). Moreover, the hand wipe levels of AO168=O (41,600ng·m-2) was significantly higher than that of the typical OPE (TPHP, 7370ng·m-2), and the hand-to-mouth contact (ΣOPAs, 9.48ng·kg bw-1·day-1; ΣNOPEs, 109ng·kg bw-1·day-1) was a more significant and integrated pathway than dust ingestion (ΣOPAs, 0.10ng·kg bw-1·day-1; ΣNOPEs, 5.01ng·kg bw-1·day-1) of e-waste related occupational exposure to these "new" chemicals.