Increased personal protective equipment litter as a result of COVID-19 measures

被引:0
|
作者
Keiron P. Roberts
Sui C. Phang
John B. Williams
David J. Hutchinson
Simon E. Kolstoe
Jasper de Bie
Ian D. Williams
Anne M. Stringfellow
机构
[1] University of Portsmouth,School of Civil Engineering & Surveying
[2] University of Portsmouth,Centre for Blue Governance
[3] University of Portsmouth,School of Health and Care Professions
[4] Griffith University,Coastal and Marine Research Centre
[5] University of Southampton,Faculty of Engineering & Physical Sciences
[6] University of Southampton,Civil & Environmental Engineering
[7] The Nature Conservancy,undefined
来源
Nature Sustainability | 2022年 / 5卷
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摘要
Use of personal protective equipment (PPE) increased during the COVID-19 pandemic to reduce virus transmission. Here, we quantitatively analyse emergence of PPE and COVID-19-related litter over 14 months for 11 countries using the litter collection application Litterati. The proportion of masks in litter increased by >80-fold as a result of COVID-19 legislation, from <0.01% to >0.8%. Gloves and wipes, more prevalent at ~0.2% of litter before the pandemic, doubled to 0.4%, but this has since fallen. Glove litter increased in the initial stages of the pandemic but fell after the introduction of facemask policies, whereupon there was an increase of facemask litter. National COVID-19 policy responses and international World Health Organization announcements and recommendations are a probable driver of PPE litter dynamics, especially the implementation of facemask policies. Waste management should be incorporated in designing future pandemic policies to avoid negative environmental legacies of mismanaged PPE.
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页码:272 / 279
页数:7
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