Title: Solid Waste Public Health Concerns
1Solid WastePublic Health Concerns
- Jeremiah Johnson
- Chi Vuong
2Overview
- Introduction
- Developed countries overview
- Developing countries overview
- Solutions
3Introduction
No regulated dumping Open dumps
Past to early 19th Century
Breeding rodents, insects
Buried dump sites mainly nonhazardous
More sanitary, less contamination
First half of the 20th Century
300 million metric tons/year space
Change in waste content, hazardous waste
Last half of the 20th Century to present
4Developed Countries Overview
- Public health concern
- -diseases
- Risks- substances, contamination etc.
- Solid Waste Management
- Methods
- Impact
- Regulations
5Public Health Concern
- Vectors
- - flies
- - mosquitoes (yellow fever, malaria)
- - rats (32)
- - swine (pathogens)
6Solid Waste Management
- Feed to swine
- Dump into bodies of water
- Open burning
- Dumps or tips
- Sanitary landfill (U.S., England, Germany)
- Armys Corp of Engineers (bullclam)
- compaction, cover, liners
7Common Landfill Layout
8Impact of Landfills
- Leachate and gases
- Scarce land
- Health Effects (adverse pregnancy outcomes, liver
function)
9U.S. Regulations
- 1899 River and Harbors Act
- 1965 Solid Waste Disposal Act
- 1970 National Environmental Policy Act (EPA)
- 1976 Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
10Developing Countries Overview
- Public health concern
- Risks- substances, contamination etc.
- Solid Waste Management
- Environmental justice- hazardous waste
- Cost of disposal
- Aiding developing countries
11Developing Countries
- Public Health Concern
- Homes-
12Drifting Along the Shores
13Solutions
- The catchy phrase Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
- Source Reduction in Industry
- Consumer pay as you throw programs
- Implemented in 7.2 of GA communities
- Implemented in over 50 of communities in MA, WI,
IA, and NH - Implemented in 100 of communities in WA, OR, and
MN
14Sources
- Race, Wealth, and Solid Waste Facilities in North
Carolina - Jennifer M. Norton,1 Steve Wing,1 Hester J.
Lipscomb,2 Jay S. Kaufman,1 Stephen W. Marshall,1
and Altha J. Cravey31Department of
Epidemiology, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina,
USA2Division of Occupational and Environmental
Medicine, Department of Community and Family
Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham,
North Carolina, USA3Department of Geography,
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA - Title Slide Image http//upload.wikimedia.org/wiki
pedia/commons/thumb/0/0d/Solid_waste_used_to_build
_a_road.jpg/800px-Solid_waste_used_to_build_a_road
.jpg - Sustainable Solid Waste http//siteresources.world
bank.org/INTPHAAG/Resources/AAGEHEng.pdf
15Sources
- 2006 Pay as You Throw Programs http//www.epa.gov/
epaoswer/non-hw/payt/06comm.htm - Cointreu, Sandra. Occupational and Environmental
Health Issues of Solid Waste Management. World
Bank Group. July 2006. - Holy Bible, 23 Deuteronomy 12-13
16Sources
- Vesilind, P. Aarne. Worrell, William. Reinhart,
Debra. Solid Waste Engineering, 2002 - A Brief History of Solid Waste Management in the
US During the Last 50 Years by H. Lanier Hickman,
Jr. and Richard W. Eldredge. 2000.
17Sources
- Investigating Health Concerns in populations
living near the Cleanaway landfill in
Tallamarine. 2006.http//www.health.vic.gov.au/env
ironment/downloads/tulla_report.pdf - Vrijheid, Martine. Health Effects of Residence
Near Hazardous Waste Landfill Sites A Review of
Epidemiologic Literature. March 2002.
http//www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov - Slide Image http//www.metrokc.gov/dnr/kidsweb/im
ages/landfill_diagram.gif