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Impact of waste of COVID-19 protective equipment on the environment, animals and human health: a review

Environmental Chemistry Letters 2022 54 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Sheng Yang, Cheng Yan-ping, Tong Liu, Tong Liu, Shaoping Huang, Lihong Yin, Lihong Yin, Yuepu Pu, Geyu Liang

Summary

This review examines how discarded COVID-19 protective equipment such as masks, gloves, and shields contributes to plastic and microplastic pollution in aquatic, terrestrial, and atmospheric environments. Evidence indicates that these materials can harm animals through entanglement and ingestion, and the resulting microplastics may pose additional risks to both animal and human health.

During the Corona Virus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, protective equipment, such as masks, gloves and shields, has become mandatory to prevent person-to-person transmission of coronavirus. However, the excessive use and abandoned protective equipment is aggravating the world's growing plastic problem. Moreover, above protective equipment can eventually break down into microplastics and enter the environment. Here we review the threat of protective equipment associated plastic and microplastic wastes to environments, animals and human health, and reveal the protective equipment associated microplastic cycle. The major points are the following:1) COVID-19 protective equipment is the emerging source of plastic and microplastic wastes in the environment. 2) protective equipment associated plastic and microplastic wastes are polluting aquatic, terrestrial, and atmospheric environments. 3) Discarded protective equipment can harm animals by entrapment, entanglement and ingestion, and derived microplastics can also cause adverse implications on animals and human health. 4) We also provide several recommendations and future research priority for the sustainable environment. Therefore, much importance should be attached to potential protective equipment associated plastic and microplastic pollution to protect the environment, animals and humans.

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