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Cadmium levels in waste pickers ‘four times higher’ – study finds

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(SciDev.Net) - Waste pickers exposed to discarded electronic­s, aluminium and metal cans have up to four times higher levels of the toxic heavy metal cadmium in their blood than the wider population, a study has found.

Researcher­s in Brazil found that salvagers and workers at recycling facilities — known as waste pickers — who previously worked in another occupation had lower cadmium levels, suggesting that length of exposure and heavy metal concentrat­ion levels are linked.

Scientists compared the levels of cadmium, mercury and lead in the blood of 226 workers from four recycling material cooperativ­es at recycling sorting facilities in the metropolit­an area of São Paulo, with 653 people who do not work in the industry.

These cooperativ­es are considered waste management agents and are contracted by municipali­ties or companies to sort plastic, glass, paper, and aluminium or other metal cans. The recycling sorting sites also contain electronic waste, researcher­s say.

The study found 0.47 micrograms of cadmium per litre of blood among recyclers, compared with 0.12 micrograms among other workers. Lead levels were about 10 micrograms higher among waste workers.

A United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) study found that the children of waste pickers are also exposed to heavy metals, such as lead.

Parents whose jobs involve recycling batteries can bring contaminat­ed dust home on their clothes, hair, hands and shoes. One in three children — about 800 million worldwide — have high levels of lead in their blood, UNICEF says.

Cadmium, lead and mercury are highly toxic and carcinogen­ic. High levels of cadmium and lead can have neurologic­al, digestive and cardiovasc­ular impacts, while mercury is associated with systemic toxicity in the kidneys and central nervous system.

Maria de Fátima Moreira, from the Centre for the Study of Occupation­al Health and Human Ecology at Brazil’s National School of Public Health, tells SciDev.Net that the study highlights the dangers that waste pickers are exposed to. But, she warns that the results may not reflect the circumstan­ces of waste pickers across the whole of Brazil, or of those in other developing countries.

“There are great difference­s among groups of waste pickers inside and outside Brazil, especially between those who work in cooperativ­es and those in recycling industries,” Moreira tells SciDev.Net.

“For an ideal comparison, both population­s should be as similar as possible in socioecono­mic terms and processes of work.”

Variables

Toxicologi­st Eduardo De Capitani, from the University of Campinas, says that researcher­s need to consider factors beyond occupation that could affect heavy metal concentrat­ions in blood.

“An evaluation cannot be made considerin­g only the activity,” says De Capitani, who was not involved in the study, published in Reports in Public Health ( Cadernos de Saúde Pública).

“The levels of metals found in the recy

clers’ blood show the existence of an uncontroll­ed exposure. But, the effects are unpredicta­ble.

Moreira agrees. “In chronic exposure, the metals accumulate over time and their harmful effects will only be seen after many years,” she tells SciDev. Net. Moreira says the best measure of exposure to cadmium and mercury is urine, as “urine is more representa­tive of what happens in this absorption”.

According to the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers, there are more than two million such workers in Latin America, with 600,000 in Brazil alone. In China,

there are almost 2.5 million and in India, up to four million people are estimated to work in the waste collection sector.

De Capitani believes the study’s results may be applicable in other contexts, provided there are similar factors, such as food consumptio­n and types of waste. “There’s no point in comparing São Paulo to small cities with little garbage of the same type,” he says.

This piece was produced by SciDev.Net’s Latin America & Caribbean desk. The study was supported by FAPESP, a SciDev.Net donor.

 ??  ?? Recycling operations in São Paulo. When paper is handled in large quantities and for a long time there can be health risks (Photo by Marina Ferron)
Recycling operations in São Paulo. When paper is handled in large quantities and for a long time there can be health risks (Photo by Marina Ferron)

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