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Environmental health risks for worker housing near Vietnam industrial zones
Summary
Researchers assessed environmental health risks for migrant workers living near industrial zones in Vietnam by measuring water quality metals and ambient air particulate matter from 2018 through 2020. While focused primarily on metals and air quality rather than microplastics specifically, the study documents pollution exposure pathways relevant to understanding industrial contamination in developing regions. The findings highlight the vulnerability of informal housing communities near industrial areas to multiple environmental pollutants.
Environmental exposures for Vietnam’s migrant workers living near industrial zones pose an understudied health risk. To understand drinking water quality, ambient air quality, and support policies that promote workers’ health, we collected household water samples to evaluate metals content and assessed PM2.5 levels in ambient air at informal housing developments in four industrial areas around Hanoi, Vietnam, from 2018 through 2020. We conducted interviews to collect sociodemographic and health indicator information from workers. The greatest drinking water quality hazard was lead (20 percent of samples above American Academy of Pediatrics level of 1 ppb and 6 percent of samples above World Health Organization, Vietnamese, and US Environmental Protection Agency guideline of 10 ppb). Manganese was above the World Health Organization guideline and US aesthetic standard in 27 percent of samples and 48 percent of households on public water systems. More than half of daily PM2.5 concentrations were above healthy levels, with a dip from March to December 2020 because of COVID-19 shutdowns, although significant air pollution remained even during reduced operations. Geographic differences in sociodemographics, health indicators, water quality, and air quality suggest possible connections between where workers live and health outcomes. Our study provides insight into environmental health risks for people working and living in industrial areas that could be addressed to improve public health and urban resilience.
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