Health consequences of exposure to e-waste: a systematic review
University of Queensland · Queensland Children’s Medical Research Institute · +3 more institutions
Abstract
The population exposed to potentially hazardous substances through inappropriate and unsafe management practices related to disposal and recycling of end-of-life electrical and electronic equipment, collectively known as e-waste, is increasing. We aimed to summarise the evidence for the association between such exposures and adverse health outcomes.
We systematically searched five electronic databases (PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, PsycNET, and CINAHL) for studies assessing the association between exposure to e-waste and outcomes related to mental health and neurodevelopment, physical health, education, and violence and criminal behaviour, from Jan 1, 1965, to Dec 17, 2012, and yielded 2274 records. Of the 165 full-text articles assessed for eligibility, we excluded a further 142, resulting in the inclusion of 23 published epidemiological studies that met the predetermined criteria. All studies were from southeast China. We assessed evidence of a causal association between exposure to e-waste and health outcomes within the Bradford Hill framework.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 35.55
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 125
Authors
7- KGKristen GrantCorresponding
University of Queensland, Queensland Children’s Medical Research Institute, Children's Medical Research Institute
- FCFiona C Goldizen
Queensland Children’s Medical Research Institute, Children's Medical Research Institute, University of Queensland
- PDPeter D. Sly
- MBMarie‐Noël Bruné
World Health Organization
- MNMaría Neira
World Health Organization
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Environmental health
- Population
- CINAHL
- Adverse effect
- Thyroid function
- Epidemiology
- Psychiatry