2020
DOI: 10.31224/osf.io/65m89
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From dumpsites to engineered landfills: A systematic review of risks to occupational and public health

Abstract: Disposal on land has persisted as the most predominant form of waste disposal for millennia and despite advances in modern engineered landfills, large quantities (405 Mt y-1) of collected municipal solid waste (MSW) are still deposited and concentrated in open, uncontrolled dumpsites throughout low- and middle-income countries (LIMICs) worldwide – a key form of waste mismanagement. These pose major threats to the health and safety of surrounding populations and mainly waste pickers who across the Global South … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 90 publications
(147 reference statements)
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“…Several reports have also reviewed evidence, specifically on dumpsites, such as Mavropoulos (2015) and ( ISWA, 2016 ) in an effort to raise the public profile of the considerable risks that these facilities poise to human health, both of which have built on an earlier study by D-Waste (2013) that identified and catalogued the world’s 50 largest dumpsites. Moreover, in their systematic review of over 3000 papers from 22 countries evaluating the evidence for health effects from land disposal, Maalouf et al (2020b) explicitly show the unreasonable potential for damage to human health and safety, alerting us of the need to shut down and mitigate danger urgently at dumpsites, avoiding harm to some of the poorest inhabitants in the world.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several reports have also reviewed evidence, specifically on dumpsites, such as Mavropoulos (2015) and ( ISWA, 2016 ) in an effort to raise the public profile of the considerable risks that these facilities poise to human health, both of which have built on an earlier study by D-Waste (2013) that identified and catalogued the world’s 50 largest dumpsites. Moreover, in their systematic review of over 3000 papers from 22 countries evaluating the evidence for health effects from land disposal, Maalouf et al (2020b) explicitly show the unreasonable potential for damage to human health and safety, alerting us of the need to shut down and mitigate danger urgently at dumpsites, avoiding harm to some of the poorest inhabitants in the world.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Three of them- Mavropoulos (2015) and ISWA (2016)-built on work done by D-Waste (2013), which listed the fifty biggest dumpsites in the world. After reading more than 3,000 papers from 22 different countries, Maalouf et al (2020b) clearly show that land disposal puts people's health and safety at an unreasonable risk. As a result, we need to start closing down and making dumpsites less dangerous right away to protect some of the poorest people in the world.…”
Section: Potential Dangers Of Unregulated Landfill Disposal Of City S...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recently, Maalouf et al (2020b) assessed the newly delivered capacity of waste infrastructure projects worldwide between 2014 and 2019. The study revealed that during this period, the new delivered capacity amounted to 243 million Mt, out of which only 9% of the new delivered capacity was delivered to developing nations.…”
Section: Wm In Developing Countriesmentioning
confidence: 99%