0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Recommendation: Human health evidence in the global treaty to end plastic pollution: a survey of policy perspectives — R0/PR4

2025 Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Marie-France Dignac, Megan Deeney, Megan Deeney, Megan Deeney, Megan Deeney, Marie-France Dignac, Marie-France Dignac, Marie-France Dignac, Megan Deeney, Megan Deeney, Xavier Cousin Megan Deeney, Megan Deeney, Megan Deeney, Marie-France Dignac, Marie-France Dignac, Marie-France Dignac, Joe Yates, Joe Yates, Joe Yates, Rosemary Green, Joe Yates, Joe Yates, Xavier Cousin Joe Yates, Joe Yates, Joe Yates, Suneetha Kadiyala, Suneetha Kadiyala, Suneetha Kadiyala, Suneetha Kadiyala, Suneetha Kadiyala, Suneetha Kadiyala, Suneetha Kadiyala, Suneetha Kadiyala, Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Rosemary Green, Marie-France Dignac, Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Marie-France Dignac, Marie-France Dignac, Marie-France Dignac, Marie-France Dignac, Marie-France Dignac, Marie-France Dignac, Marie-France Dignac, Megan Deeney, Megan Deeney, Megan Deeney, Megan Deeney, Megan Deeney, Megan Deeney, Rosemary Green, Xavier Cousin Mengjiao Wang, Mengjiao Wang, Xavier Cousin Mengjiao Wang, Joe Yates, Mengjiao Wang, Mengjiao Wang, Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Mengjiao Wang, Mengjiao Wang, Mengjiao Wang, Trisia Farrelly, Xavier Cousin Suneetha Kadiyala, Trisia Farrelly, Trisia Farrelly, Trisia Farrelly, Trisia Farrelly, Trisia Farrelly, Trisia Farrelly, Trisia Farrelly, Xavier Cousin Rosemary Green, Rosemary Green, Rosemary Green, Rosemary Green, Rosemary Green, Rosemary Green, Rosemary Green, Rosemary Green, Rosemary Green, Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Trisia Farrelly, Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Joe Yates, Joe Yates, Joe Yates, Joe Yates, Xavier Cousin Joe Yates, Joe Yates, Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin Xavier Cousin

Summary

A survey of UN delegates working on the Global Plastics Treaty found that policymakers broadly prioritize human health evidence but differ on preferred mitigation strategies, with the study offering recommendations for streamlining research to better inform treaty negotiations.

Science shows mounting global health risks associated with plastics life cycle pollution. Leveraging evidence and streamlining research to inform policy is critical to safeguarding people and planet. We conducted an electronic survey questionnaire, between 16th April and 16th August 2024, amongst United Nations government delegates developing the Global Plastics Treaty. We explored (1) perceptions and prioritisation of human health evidence, (2) preferred plastic pollution mitigation strategies, and (3) priorities for health research. Responses were collected in Qualtrics and analysed using summary statistics, the Fisher’s Exact Test, and thematically mapped to the Policy Cycle Framework. We received 27 survey responses, balanced by gender and career stage, including 23 countries and all World Bank country income classifications and regions, but greater representation from high-income and European countries. Human health was the highest-ranking concern related to plastics risks (Sum of rank scores (SRS) = 54). Most delegates expressed strong conviction in evidence of risks associated with plastics chemicals, polymers, products, microplastics and broader life cycle emissions. Reducing plastics production (SRS = 53) and eliminating chemicals, polymers and products of concern (SRS = 53) were prioritised, even amongst those affiliated with waste management departments or less convinced of health risks. We found the least regard for recycling as a strategy to protect health (SRS = 4–5) and eliminating open burning was the most prioritised downstream measure (SRS = 15). Generating quantitative, causal data on risks across plastics life cycles, identifying emerging health hazards, defining criteria, safe lists and substitutes for chemicals, polymers and products were government delegate priorities for research, alongside tools to track policy impacts on health and greater bilateral communication between scientists and delegations. Health risks of all forms of plastic pollution were a concern for most delegates responding to our survey. We identified key priorities for policy-driven research to strengthen the science-policy interface and support evidence-based plastics policy that protects human health.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper