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Planning for disposal of COVID-19 pandemic wastes in developing countries: a review of current challenges

Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 2021 42 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Hassan El-Ramady, Heba Elbasiouny, Heba Elbasiouny, Heba Elbasiouny, Fathy Elbehiry Eric C. Brevik, Hassan El-Ramady, Tamer Elsakhawy, Heba Elbasiouny, Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Ahmed Mosa, Tamer Elsakhawy, Eric C. Brevik, Yahya Eid, Eric C. Brevik, Neama Abdalla, Ahmed Mosa, Alaa El-Dein Omara, Eric C. Brevik, Heba Elbasiouny, Fathy Elbehiry Fathy Elbehiry Megahed Amer, Eric C. Brevik, Heba Elbasiouny, Hassan El-Ramady, Megahed Amer, Megahed Amer, Alaa El-Dein Omara, Alaa El-Dein Omara, A. El-Ghamry, Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Tamer Elsakhawy, Hassan El-Ramady, Ahmed Mosa, Fathy Elbehiry Hassan El-Ramady, Tamer Elsakhawy, Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Eric C. Brevik, Eric C. Brevik, Fathy Elbehiry Heba Elbasiouny, Eric C. Brevik, Alaa El-Dein Omara, Megahed Amer, Neama Abdalla, Yahya Eid, Tamer Elsakhawy, Eric C. Brevik, Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Tamer Elsakhawy, Tamer Elsakhawy, Eric C. Brevik, Alaa El-Dein Omara, Alaa El-Dein Omara, Ahmed Ezzat, Eric C. Brevik, Eric C. Brevik, Eric C. Brevik, Eric C. Brevik, Fathy Elbehiry Eric C. Brevik, Ahmed Mosa, A. El-Ghamry, Eric C. Brevik, Eric C. Brevik, Hassan El-Ramady, Hassan El-Ramady, Neama Abdalla, Szilárd Rezes, Eric C. Brevik, Szilárd Rezes, Mai Elboraey, Mai Elboraey, Ahmed Ezzat, Yahya Eid, Fathy Elbehiry

Summary

Researchers review the acute challenges developing countries face in managing the surge of COVID-19-related medical waste, highlighting how pre-existing deficiencies in waste infrastructure, treatment capacity, and disposal practices create serious risks of accelerating viral spread and environmental contamination.

The health sector is critical to the well-being of any country, but developing countries have several obstacles that prevent them from providing adequate health care. This became an even larger concern after the COVID-19 outbreak left millions of people dead worldwide and generated huge amounts of infected or potentially infected wastes. The management and disposal of medical wastes during and post-COVID-19 represent a major challenge in all countries, but this challenge is particularly great for developing countries that do not have robust waste disposal infrastructure. The main problems in developing countries include inefficient treatment procedures, limited capacity of healthcare facilities, and improper waste disposal procedures. The management of medical wastes in most developing countries was primitive prior to the pandemic. The improper treatment and disposal of these wastes in our current situation may further speed COVID-19 spread, creating a serious risk for workers in the medical and sanitation fields, patients, and all of society. Therefore, there is a critical need to discuss emerging challenges in handling, treating, and disposing of medical wastes in developing countries during and after the COVID-19 outbreak. There is a need to determine best disposal techniques given the conditions and limitations under which developing countries operate. Several open questions need to be investigated concerning this global issue, such as to what extent developing countries can control the expected environmental impacts of COVID-19, particularly those related to medical wastes? What are the projected management scenarios for medical wastes under the COVID-19 outbreak? And what are the major environmental risks posed by contaminated wastes related to COVID-19 treatment? Studies directed at the questions above, careful planning, the use of large capacity mobile recycling facilities, and following established guidelines for disposal of medical wastes should reduce risk of COVID-19 spread in developing countries.

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