Environmental Research Institute, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand; Harry Butler Institute, Murdoch University, Murdoch, Western Australia, Australia.
School of Science, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand.
Sci Total Environ. 2019 Feb 15;651(Pt 2):2400-2409. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.10.137. Epub 2018 Oct 11.
The environmental, social and cultural importance of beaches permeates human society, yet the risk of human injury associated with increasing exposure to anthropogenic beach litter remains an unknown. While the impact of marine debris and beach litter on marine and coastal fauna and flora is a widely reported global issue, we investigate the impact on human health in New Zealand. Anthropogenic beach litter is ubiquitous, few beaches remain pristine, which consequently influences tourist choices and potentially negatively interacts with humans. Human impacts are not well-investigated, with no quantitative studies of impact but many studies qualitatively inferring impact. New Zealand has a socialised medical system allowing a quantitative, decadal assessment of medical insurance claims to determine patterns and trends across ecosystems and causes. We demonstrate for the first time that anthropogenic beach litter poses a common and pervasive exposure hazard to all ages, with specific risk posed to young children. The New Zealand system allows these hazards to be investigated to determine the true effects and costs across a nation, providing an evidence base for decision-makers to address this ubiquitous environmental issue.
海滩的环境、社会和文化重要性渗透到人类社会中,但与人类日益接触人为海滩垃圾相关的受伤风险仍然未知。虽然海洋垃圾和海滩垃圾对海洋和沿海动植物的影响是一个广泛报道的全球性问题,但我们调查了它们对新西兰人类健康的影响。人为海滩垃圾无处不在,很少有海滩保持原始状态,这反过来又影响了游客的选择,并可能对人类产生负面影响。人类的影响尚未得到充分研究,没有关于影响的定量研究,但有许多研究定性推断影响。新西兰拥有社会化的医疗体系,允许对医疗保险索赔进行定量的、十年期评估,以确定生态系统和原因之间的模式和趋势。我们首次证明,人为海滩垃圾对所有年龄段的人都构成了常见且普遍的暴露危害,对幼儿构成了特定风险。新西兰的系统允许调查这些危害,以确定在全国范围内的真实影响和成本,为决策者提供解决这一普遍存在的环境问题的证据基础。