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Waste Management & Research, Vol. 23, No. 1, 79-86 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/0734242X05048037

Vaccinations for waste-handling workers. A review of the literature

Rebecca Tooher

Tabatha Griffin

Elen Shute

ASERNIP-S, Royal Australasian College of Surgeons, Adelaide, South Australia

Guy Maddern

University of Adelaide, Department of Surgery, The Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Woodville, South Australia.

A review of the literature relating to the need for vaccination against infectious disease in the solid waste industry was conducted, focusing on hepatitis A, hepatitis B and tetanus. Databases (Medline, PreMedline, EMBASE, CINAHL, Current Contents, Cochrane Database, HTA Database, DARE, OSHROM) were searched up to and including August 2003. Articles were included in the review if they reported the prevalence of immunity to hepatitis A, hepatitis B or tetanus in solid waste workers or the incidence of clinical infection with any of these diseases. Papers about hazardous or medical waste, incineration or other infectious diseases were excluded. Fortyfour papers constituted the evidence database. Only one paper studied the prevalence of antibodies to hepatitis A and hepatitis B in solid waste workers compared with sewage plant workers and office workers, and no difference was found between these groups of workers. There was some evidence to support a theoretical risk of infection with hepatitis A, B and tetanus; however, no studies could be found of the risk of these diseases in solid waste workers. No single cases of these diseases being acquired occupationally in solid waste management were identified in the literature. Workers in the solid waste industry may theoretically be at increased risk of acquiring infectious diseases occupationally. However, at present no studies could be found which have documented this risk.

Key Words: Waste management • infection • vaccination • solid waste: wmr 746–1


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