Friday, March 29, 2024
Waste Management

Traditional/Crude Biomedical Waste Disposal Process

The traditional methods of biomedical waste disposal in most communities and cities include but is not limited to the following: barging into the waters (streams, rivers and sea), open dumping on land, crude or open air burning, feeding of hogs or other animals, burying etc.

In our earlier discussions of biomedical waste concept, we noted that the history of waste is closely tied to the varied activities undertaken by man on earth. Hence solid waste disposal has been part of our development and history.

What actually have continued to change are the improvements in the techniques and benefits of biomedical waste management.

Read Also: Biomedical Special Waste Management Processes

The traditional methods of biomedical waste disposal in most communities and cities include but is not limited to the following: – barging into the waters (streams, rivers and sea), open dumping on land, crude or open air burning, feeding of hogs or other animals, burying etc.

1. Burial of Solid Waste

This would have been a good method of solid waste disposal as it tends to obey natural process of returning materials especially organic matter content to the soil.

However, burial can only be applied to smallest quantities of solid waste and even at that it is still cost and labor intensive.

Advantages of Burial Method

1. It encourages the recycling mineral elements and natural energy resources

2. It may increase soil fertility

3. It is eco-friendly

4. It can be handled at household level

5. It does not require skilled labor for operation.

Disadvantages

1.It is laborious

2. It is not suitable for scale up operations

3. It is costly to apply

4. It may lead to contamination of land and water resources

5. It is not sustainable.

2. Open Dumping (Crude ATipping)

This method involves the indiscriminate dumping of solid waste without adequate consideration to their environmental and health effects. Most of the municipal solid waste in developing countries is dumped on land in a more or less uncontrolled manner.

Those dumps make very uneconomical use of the available space and often produce unpleasant and hazardous smoke from slow- burning fires.

The present disposal situation is expected to deteriorate even more as, with rapid urbanization, settlements and housing estates encircle existing dumps and the environmental degradation associated with the dumps directly affects the population.

Waste disposal sites are, therefore, also subject to growing opposition, and it is becoming increasingly difficult to find new sites that meet public approval and are located a reasonable distance from the collection area.

Traditional/Crude Biomedical Waste Disposal Process

Advantages Open Dumping

1.It is cheap to operate

2. It requires little or no planning

3. It does not utilize skilled labor in operation.

Disadvantages

1. It produces objectionable odors and it is also unsightly

2. It can lead to fire accidents

3. It provides ideal breeding places for rats and vermin

4. It can lead to fire and physical accident

5. It is not sustainable and eco-friendly

6. Ground water and run off pollution.

3. Dumping into Water Bodies (Bargingin to the Sea)

This is a method popular in riverine communities but is now in abuse getting popular in unplanned areas of our major cities in the country.

Read Also: Different Types of Hospital Wastes

Riverine communities with inadequate arable lands use canoes and barges to carry solid waste far into the sea for disposal. However, it is not uncommon to find in Nigerian semi-urban and crowded urban settlements people who dump solid waste directly into small streams as disposal system.

Dumping of solid waste into water bodies is not a good practice as the wastes not only provide nutrients in the water bodies leading to the condition called eutrophication. This causes high oxygen crises for aquatic species and makes the water unsuitable for drinking and other domestic uses.

Advantages Dumping into Water Bodies

1.It is almost cost free

2. It is a final disposal method as the waste is not amenable to further handling

3. It is free of odor nuisance

4. It takes care of large volume of solid waste

5. It encourages aqua culture when applied to appropriate

6. It is convenient to operate.

Disadvantages

1. It is a source of water pollution

2. It can lead to destruction of aquatic life instead of promoting aquaculture

3. It often constitutes grave nuisances as refuse are swept back to the shore either due to wind or water wave action.

4. Open Air Burning

This involves the ignition of waste matter in the open from which the products of the combustion are emitted directly into the air without passing through a stack of chimney filter. Open burning can be done in open drums or metal baskets, in fields or yards and in large open sites.

Materials commonly disposed of in this manner in some Nigeria cities today includes municipal waste, automobile scrap components, landscape wood, refuse, agricultural field waste, bulky industrial waste, scrap furniture and leaves with other materials raked during street cleaning.

Open burning has been practiced by a number of urban centres because it reduces the volume of refuse received at the dump and therefore extends the life of their dumpsite.

Garbage may be burnt because of the ease and convenience of the method or because of the cheapness of the method.

In countries where house holders are required to pay for garbage disposal, burning of waste in the backyard allows the householder to avoid paying the costs associated with collecting, hauling and dumping the waste.

Open burning has many negative effects on both human health and the environment. This uncontrolled burning of garbage releases many pollutants into the atmosphere.

These include dioxins, particulate matter, polycyclic aromatic compounds, volatile organic compounds, carbon monoxide, hexachlorobenzene and ash. All of these chemicals pose serious risks to human health.

The dioxins are capable of producing a multitude of health problems; they can have adverse effects on reproduction, development, disrupt the hormonal systems or even cause cancer.

The polycyclic aromatic compounds and the hexachlorobenzene are considered to be carcinogenic. The particulate matter can be harmful to persons with respiratory problems such as asthma or bronchitis and carbon monoxide can cause neurological symptoms. The harmful effects of open burning are also felt by the environment.

This process releases acidic gases such as the halo-hydrides; it also may release the oxides of nitrogen and carbon. Nitrogen oxides contribute to acid rain, ozone depletion, smog and global warming.

In addition to being a greenhouse gas carbon monoxide reacts with sunlight to produce ozone which can be harmful. The particulate matter creates smoke and haze which contribute to air pollution.

Advantages of Open Air Burning

1.Disease pathogens are eliminated in the fire

2. It is cheap as it requires less manpower.

Disadvantages

1.It may lead to fire accident

2. It generates air pollution and may lead to acid rain

3. It produces odor nuisance

4. Resources are lost in the fire

5. Half burnt refuse could afford breeding place for flies and food for rats and other vermin.

5. Hog Feeding

This is a method of feeding domestic animals especially pigs with wastes of garbage class. This practice is encouraged as it is in compliance with the principle of integrated waste management. It encourages waste sorting and reuse, energy recycling and serious cost reduction.

However it is only most practicable in waste streams composed mainly of garbage and adequately separated at source.

Read Also: Biomedical Special Waste Management Processes

Advantages of Hog Feeding

1. It is a source of food to domestic animals

2. It saves costs

3. It is sustainable and eco-friendly

4. It can lend itself to large scale application.

Disadvantages

1. It is an intermediate and not final method of solid waste disposal

2. It may give rise to nuisances like odor, fly breeding and rodent infestation.

3. Scavengers are pre-disposed to diseases like tuberculosis, anthrax and other zoonosis.

In conclusion, traditional waste management practices are efficient when applied to local situations in small communities with sparse population densities.

The methods are however overwhelmed when applied to bulk waste emanating from densely populated urban communities with sophisticated life styles and generating complicated waste profiles.

Knowledge and experiences gained in operating the traditional disposal systems may however be a good resource in developing technologies that will help address the challenges of semi urban and urban waste management.

WealthInWastes

Benadine Nonye is an agricultural consultant and a writer with over 12 years of professional experience in the agriculture industry. - National Diploma in Agricultural Technology - Bachelor's Degree in Agricultural Science - Master's Degree in Science Education... Visit My Websites On: 1. Agric4Profits.com - Your Comprehensive Practical Agricultural Knowledge and Farmer’s Guide Website! 2. WealthinWastes.com - For Effective Environmental Management through Proper Waste Management and Recycling Practices! Join Me On: Twitter: @benadinenonye - Instagram: benadinenonye - LinkedIn: benadinenonye - YouTube: Agric4Profits TV and WealthInWastes TV - Pinterest: BenadineNonye4u - Facebook: BenadineNonye

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