Comparing Environmental Policies to Reduce Pharmaceutical Pollution and Address Disparities

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Comparing Environmental Policies to Reduce Pharmaceutical Pollution and Address Disparities
Abstract
Pharmaceutical products, including active pharmaceutical ingredients and inactive ingredients such as packaging materials, have raised significant concerns due to their persistent input and potential threats to human and environmental health. Discourse on reducing pharmaceutical waste and subsequent pollution is often limited, as information about the toxicity of pharmaceuticals in humans is yet to be fully established. Nevertheless, there is growing awareness about ecotoxicity, and efforts to curb pharmaceutical pollution in the European Union (EU), United States (US), and Canada have emerged along with waste disposal and treatment procedures, as well as growing concerns about impacts on human and animal health, such as through antimicrobial resistance. Yet, the outcomes of such endeavors are often disparate and involve multiple agencies, organizations, and departments with little evidence of cooperation, collaboration, or oversight. Environmental health disparities occur when communities exposed to a combination of poor environmental quality and social inequities experience more sickness and disease than wealthier, less polluted communities. In this paper, we discuss pharmaceutical environmental pollution in the context of health disparities and examine policies across the US, EU, and Canada in minimizing environmental pollution.
Publication
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Publisher
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
Date
2022/1
Volume
19
Issue
14
Pages
8292
Citation Key
desaiComparingEnvironmentalPolicies2022
Accessed
7/26/22, 2:09 PM
ISSN
1660-4601
Language
en
Library Catalog
Extra
6 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31] Number: 14
Citation
Desai, M., Njoku, A., & Nimo-Sefah, L. (2022). Comparing Environmental Policies to Reduce Pharmaceutical Pollution and Address Disparities. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(14), 8292. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19148292