About this Research Topic
The absence of a discerning and public health-based approach to the disposal of e-waste and heavy metals has resulted in significant public health risks. Following human exposure, these metals generate bio-toxic chemicals that can permanently alter the structure of tissues and disrupt the biochemical and physiological mechanisms that keep living things functioning. When heavy metals disperse leaches into our environment, including our water supplies, the toxic pollutant is bio-magnified into the food chain and causes severe toxicity inside the organs of living things; this includes silicosis, cuts from cathode ray tube glass, mercury inhalation, acid contact with eyes, skin, and circulatory failure. Nevertheless, in many low- and middle-income countries, this waste is being managed by the informal sector, further compounding the problem.
Presently, the available disposal and treatment technologies and government policies for e-waste are inadequate and have a direct impact on human health and the environment. It is imperative to create public health policies and look for advanced and easily accessible remediators, as well as suitable disposal procedures and guidelines regarding e-waste heavy metal toxicity due to their public health and environmental impacts. The solution should be an environmentally friendly method, due to the increasing demand for new technologies and the equally rapid emergence of concerns related to e-waste and heavy metals.
This Research Topic welcomes public health-related research on e-waste and heavy metals concerning its effects on human health and the environment, including topics such as:
1. Electronic waste management and its leachates’ effects on human health and the environment.
2. The resale, salvage, recycling, or disposal of e-waste in different countries and its effects on human health and the environment.
3. Sources of e-waste from medical equipment and its impact on the environment and public health.
4. The occupational health effects of soaring e-waste on the persons involved in recycling activities.
5. Integrated phytobial heavy metals remediation strategies for a sustainable clean environment.
6. Bioremediation of heavy metal from soil and aquatic environments through a public health lens.
Keywords: Heavy metals, e-waste, environmental impact, environmental health, leachates, sustainability
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.