4.6 Review

Composition, dispersion, and health risks of bioaerosols in wastewater treatment plants: A review

Journal

Publisher

HIGHER EDUCATION PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s11783-020-1330-1

Keywords

Wastewater treatment plant; Bioaerosols; Pathogen; Dispersion; Risk assessment

Funding

  1. Special Fund from the State Key Joint Laboratory of Environment Simulation and Pollution Control (Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences) [19Z03ESPCR]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51478456, 41961134033]

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Bioaerosols are biological airborne particles that may contain pathogens and pose health risks to humans. Wastewater treatment plants are significant sources of bioaerosols, with high concentrations and potentially pathogenic substances. Inhalation is identified as the main exposure route, and future research should focus on identifying emerging contaminants and developing prevention and control systems.
Bioaerosols are defined as airborne particles (0.05-100 mu n in size) of biological origin. They are considered potentially harmful to human health as they can contain pathogens such as bacteria, fungi, and viruses. This review summarizes the most recent research on the health risks of bioaerosols emitted from wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) in order to improve the control of such bioaerosols. The concentration and size distribution of WWTP bioaerosols; their major emission sources, composition, and health risks; and considerations for future research are discussed. The major themes and findings in the literature are as follows: the major emission sources of WWTP bioaerosols include screen rooms, sludge-dewatering rooms, and aeration tanks; the bioaerosol concentrations in screen and sludge-dewatering rooms are higher than those outdoors. WWTP bioaerosols contain a variety of potentially pathogenic bacteria, fungi, antibiotic resistance genes, viruses, endotoxins, and toxic metal(loid)s. These potentially pathogenic substances spread with the bioaerosols, thereby posing health risks to workers and residents in and around the WWTP. Inhalation has been identified as the main exposure route, and children are at a higher risk of this than adults. Future studies should identify emerging contaminants, establish health risk assessments, and develop prevention and control systems.

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