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  5. An environmental impact perspective of the management, treatment, and disposal of hazardous compounds generated as medical waste at selected hospitals in Cape Town, South Africa
 
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An environmental impact perspective of the management, treatment, and disposal of hazardous compounds generated as medical waste at selected hospitals in Cape Town, South Africa

Author(s)
Sattar, Shaheen
Date Issued
2013
Type
Thesis
Publisher
Cape Peninsula University of Technology
Abstract
Pharmaceuticals have been formulated to influence physiological systems in humans, animals, and microbes but have never been considered as potential environmental pollutants by healthcare professionals. The human body is not a barrier to chemicals, but is permeable to it. Thus after performing their in-vivo functions, pharmaceutical compound introduced into the body, exit mainly via urine and faeces. Sewage therefore contains highly complex mixtures of chemicals in various degrees of biological potency. Sewage treatment works including those in South Africa, on the other hand, are known to be inefficient in removing drugs from sewage and consequently either the unmetabolised pharmaceutical compounds or their metabolites emerge in the environment as pollutants via several trajectories. In the environment, the excreted metabolites may even undergo regeneration to the original parent molecule under bacterial influence, resulting in “trans-vivo-pharmaceutical-pol ution-cycles”. Although all incinerators are known to generate toxins such dioxins and furans from the drugs they incinerate, all the medicines disposed by the hospitals under research, were incinerated, as the preferred option of disposal. The incineration process employed was found to be environmentally unsafe. Expired and unused medicines which the general public discard as municipal solid waste become landfilled. Because many landfill sites are not appropriately engineered, the unwanted drugs landfilled therein, leach into the surrounding ground water, which is the influent source of water treatment plants. Water treatment plants, including those in South Africa, are also inefficient in eliminating pharmaceutical compounds, releasing them in sub-therapeutic concentrations into potable tap water as pollutants, the full effects of which are yet to be determined.
Additional information
Thesis (MTech(Environmental Health))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2011.
Subjects

Medical wastes -- Sou...

Hospitals -- Waste di...

Hazardous waste treat...

Health facilities -- ...

Refuse and refuse dis...

Environmental health ...

Dissertations, Academ...

MTech

Theses, dissertations...

Thesis (MTech (Enviro...

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205281338_Sattar_MS_2011.pdf

Description
Thesis
Size

9.32 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum

(MD5):cd76ebcf53509e307273e5d00b54020c

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