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Impact of Waste Management on Public Health and Environmental Sustainability

Springer Link (Chiba Institute of Technology) 2026 Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Harsh Purohit, Veda Pandya, Mehul Chauhan

Summary

This review analyzes major waste streams including municipal, industrial, biomedical, electronic, and radioactive waste and evaluates waste management practices and their environmental and health impacts. The study discusses how improper waste handling contributes to contamination including microplastic pollution, with unmanaged landfills and open burning releasing toxins linked to adverse health outcomes.

Body Systems

Rapidly escalating global waste generation poses serious challenges to environmental quality and public health. Currently, as per the World Bank's What a Waste 2.0 report, the world produces over 2 billion tonnes of solid waste annually, a figure projected to rise to 3.4 billion tonnes by 2050. This review provides a critical analysis of major waste streams - municipal, industrial, biomedical, electronic, and radioactive - and evaluates common waste management practices alongside their environmental and health impacts. Improper waste handling is found to contaminate air, water, and soil, contributing to climate change and biodiversity loss. Unmanaged landfills emit methane, while open burning and incineration release toxins like dioxins and heavy metals, which have been linked to cancers and other diseases. Exposure to waste pollution elevates risks of respiratory illness, infections, and vector-borne diseases in nearby communities. A comparative analysis of case studies highlights how high-income countries have achieved minimal landfill usage (<1%) through recycling and waste-to-energy (WtE), whereas developing countries often rely on open dumps and informal recycling. Sustainable solutions - including policy reforms, technological innovations, and community engagement - are critically examined for their effectiveness. Remaining challenges, such as data gaps, weak enforcement, and infrastructure deficits, are discussed to outline future research and policy needs. The findings underscore an urgent need for integrated and sustainable waste management strategies worldwide to safeguard public health and ecosystems.

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