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Wastewater-based epidemiology for the assessment of population exposure to chemicals

Authors :
Barbara Kasprzyk-Hordern
Frederic Béen
Lubertus Bijlsma
Werner Brack
Sara Castiglioni
Adrian Covaci
Bice S. Martincigh
Jochen F. Mueller
Alexander L.N. van Nuijs
Temilola Oluseyi
Kevin V. Thomas
Chemistry for Environment & Health
AIMMS
Source :
Kasprzyk-Hordern, B, Béen, F, Bijlsma, L, Brack, W, Castiglioni, S, Covaci, A, Martincigh, B S, Mueller, J F, van Nuijs, A L N, Oluseyi, T & Thomas, K V 2023, ' Wastewater-based epidemiology for the assessment of population exposure to chemicals : The need for integration with human biomonitoring for global One Health actions ', Journal of Hazardous Materials, vol. 450, 131009, pp. 1-6 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2023.131009, Journal of hazardous materials, Journal of Hazardous Materials, 450:131009, 1-6. Elsevier
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

WBE has now become a complimentary tool in SARS-CoV-2 surveillance. This was preceded by the established application of WBE to assess the consumption of illicit drugs in communities. It is now timely to build on this and take the opportunity to expand WBE to enable comprehensive assessment of community exposure to chemical stressors and their mixtures. The goal of WBE is to quantify community exposure, discover exposure-outcome associations, and trigger policy, technological or societal intervention strategies with the overarching aim of exposure prevention and public health promotion. To achieve WBE's full potential, the following key aspects require further action: (1) Integration of WBE-HBM (human biomonitoring) initiatives that provide compre-hensive community-individual multichemical exposure assessment. (2) Global WBE monitoring campaigns to provide much needed data on exposure in low-and middle-income countries (LMICs) and fill in the gaps in knowledge especially in the underrepresented highly urbanised as well as rural settings in LMICs. (3) Combining WBE with One Health actions to enable effective interventions. (4) Advancements in new analytical tools and methodologies for WBE progression to enable biomarker selection for exposure studies, and to provide sensitive and selective multiresidue analysis for trace multi-biomarker quantification in a complex wastewater matrix. Most of all, further developments of WBE needs to be undertaken by co-design with key stakeholder groups: government organisations, health authorities and private sector.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03043894
Volume :
450
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Hazardous Materials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fb1e5c90501f4d9afc78055711f8d5f0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2023.131009