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COVID-19 Personal Protection Equipment (PPE): A Potential Source of Microplastic Pollution in the State of Qatar

University of the Future: Re-Imagining Research and Higher Education 2020 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, Jassim A. Al‐Khayat, Jassim A. Al‐Khayat, Jassim A. Al‐Khayat, Jassim A. Al‐Khayat, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, P. Vethamony S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, P. Vethamony P. Vethamony S. Veerasingam, P. Vethamony S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, P. Vethamony Jassim A. Al‐Khayat, Jassim A. Al‐Khayat, P. Vethamony S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, S. Veerasingam, Jassim A. Al‐Khayat, P. Vethamony P. Vethamony Jassim A. Al‐Khayat, Jassim A. Al‐Khayat, P. Vethamony Jassim A. Al‐Khayat, P. Vethamony P. Vethamony P. Vethamony

Summary

Researchers assessed whether COVID-19 personal protective equipment — particularly face masks and respirators — was contributing to plastic pollution along Qatar's coastline. The study found mask and PPE waste added to existing marine litter, raising concerns that pandemic-related plastic use increased microplastic contamination in coastal environments.

Polymers

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has become a global pandemic. The personal protection equipment (PPE), especially medical face masks and N95 filtering face piece respirators (FFRs) are typically worn by people at home/office/working place/outside to protect from infection. Thus, the increase in consumption of facemasks and FFRs across Qatar has given rise to a new environmental challenge, adding to the vast plastic waste in the environment. Our team has already established the baseline levels of marine litter (ML) including plastic waste along the west coast of Qatar based on November 2019 ML survey (Veerasingam et al., 2020a). To study the impact of COVID-19 on ML, we have conducted another survey along the west coast of Qatar in July 2020. The distribution of PPE is higher on the southern part of west coast of Qatar than the northern part. Attenuated total reflectance - Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy was used to characterize the polymer types of surgical facemasks, N95 FFRs and gloves. Polypropylene (PP) and polyamide (PA) were the abundant polymer types of PPEs. This study confirmed that the PPE could be a potential source for microplastic contaminant in the environment, especially if the present situation continues. Therefore, proper waste removal measures have to be followed.

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