Rapid Health Impact Assessment of a Proposed Poultry Processing Plant in Millsboro, Delaware
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Poultry Production and Impacts on the Environment and Human Health
1.2. Community Concerns about a Proposed Poultry Processing Plant in Delaware
1.3. Proposed Use of a Health Impact Assessment (HIA)
A systematic process that uses an array of data sources and analytic methods and considers input from stakeholders to determine the potential effects of a proposed policy, plan, program, or project on the health of a population and the distribution of those effects within the population. HIA provides recommendations on monitoring and managing those effects.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Screening
2.2. Scoping
2.3. Assessment
2.4. Reporting
3. Results
3.1. Geographic Analysis of Millsboro, Delaware
3.2. Sociodemographic Analysis
3.3. Baseline Environmental Assessment
3.4. Chemicals of Concern
3.5. Baseline Health Assessment
3.5.1. Respiratory Issues and Healthcare Access
3.5.2. Cancer
3.6. Impact Assessment
3.6.1. Exposures Related to Poultry Processing, Transport, and Waste Discharge
3.6.2. Odor Issues
3.6.3. Occupational Health
3.6.4. Traffic Concerns
3.6.5. Economic Benefits of the Proposed Processing Plant
4. Discussion
4.1. Key Findings
4.2. Challenges and Limitations Related to the Implementation of the Rapid HIA
4.3. Impact of the HIA
4.4. Value of the HIA in the US and beyond
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Facility | Distance from Harim Millsboro | Amount of Emissions | Types of Emissions/Pollution | History of Pollution |
---|---|---|---|---|
NRG Indian River Plant | 2 miles | 279,354 Lbs. (2013) [37] | Chemical—barium, manganese, vanadium, lead [37] | Coal ash dump—groundwater contaminated with arsenic, chromium, and thallium [38] Closed coal-fired units in 2011 and 2013 to meet consent order to limit mercury, sulfur dioxide, and nitrous oxide emissions [39,40,41,42] |
Mountaire Millsboro Poultry Processing Plant | 2 miles | 3167 Lbs [43,44] | Hydrogen sulfide, manganese, copper [33,41] | Received 17 violations from DNREC for exceedances of CO, NH3, nitrous oxides, nitrates, and sulfur oxides [33] |
NCR Superfund Site | 1 mile | None | Chromium, trichloroethylene (TCE) [41,42] | Wastewater with high levels of chromium treated and stored in unlined pits on site until 1980s; added to NPL in 1987 [41,42,43] |
Millsboro TCE Superfund Site | 2 miles | None | TCE [44] | 2005—remediation occurred because TCE found entering groundwater; bottled water given to residents during this time [45] |
Chemical | EPA Standards | Health Effects | EPA Carcinogen Analysis | Concentrations Found at Harim Millsboro |
---|---|---|---|---|
Arsenic * | Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) of 0.010 mg/L for drinking water | Acute exposure—numbness, nausea, vomiting, or burning sensations in the hands and feet, cardiovascular effects, and fatigue Chronic exposure-dermatological damage | Yes—chronic exposure associated with an increased risk of lung, skin, kidney, bladder, and prostate cancer | Vary from 0.0005–18.2 mg/L [46] |
Chloride * | Secondary Maximum Contaminant Level (SMCL) 2 of 250 mg/L for drinking water | No known health effects; can cause corrosion in metal pipes, thus increasing amount of heavy metals in water | No | Vary between 12–560 mg/L [46] |
Chromium-3 and Chromium-6 * | MCL of 0.1 mg/L for drinking water | Ingestion—Skin irritation Acute inhalation—Respiratory issues Chronic inhalation—Bronchitis, pneumonia, decreased lung function, and nasal septum destruction | Chromium-6 carcinogenic when inhaled and possible carcinogen when ingested | Elevated at site, below MCL in sprayfields [46,47,48] |
Cobalt | None | Oral exposure—Nausea, vomiting, vision problems, skin irritation, thyroid damage, heart problems, death Acute inhalation—Decreased lung function, congestion, edema, and hemorrhage Chronic inhalation—Severe respiratory and cardiovascular issues | Not classified for carcinogenicity | Not monitored in public wells; private wells nearby ranged from 0.0018–0.523 mg/L [46] |
Hydrogen Sulfide * | None; Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has set standards for occupational exposure | Acute exposure—nausea, headache, eye and respiratory tract irritation, death at extremely high concentrations (over 500 ppm) Chronic exposure—impaired vision and sense of smell, dizziness, possible neurological defects | Not classified for carcinogenicity | Not available for site; at nearby Mountaire Processing Plant, 76% of emissions [33] |
Nitrate * | MCL of 10 mg/L for drinking water | Methemoglobinemia, neurological issues, death | Not classified nitrate for carcinogenicity | Two wells measured 4.2 and 9.9 mg/L [46] |
Particulate Matter (PM2.5 and PM10) * | PM2.5 Primary—12 μg/m3 Secondary—15 μg/m3 24 h—35 μg/m3 PM10 24 h—150 μg/m3 | Acute exposure—cardiovascular and respiratory issues Chronic exposure—increased mortality among individuals with chronic heart or lung diseases | Designated carcinogenic for diesel particulate matter; likely to be carcinogenic to humans by inhalation | Not measured at site; nearest monitoring station in Seaford shows above National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) |
Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) * | MCL for Total Trihalomethanes (TTHM) in drinking water is 0.08 mg/L | Acute exposure—nose, throat, and eye irritation; vomiting; nausea; dizziness; headache; worsening of asthma symptoms Chronic exposure to high levels—liver, kidney, and central nervous system damage | Bromoform—Probable human carcinogen Chloroform—likely to be carcinogenic Dibromodichloromethane—not classifiable as carcinogenic | Chloroform, PCE, and TCE most common VOCs, found at site [49] |
Trichloroethylene (TCE) | MCL for TCE in drinking water is 0.005 mg/L | Acute exposure via inhalation—dizziness, tiredness, headaches, loss of coordination, cognitive and neurological issues Acute exposure in large quantities in air—unconsciousness or premature death | Likely to be carcinogenic by all routes of exposure | 1.2 μg/L [46] |
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Baskin-Graves, L.; Mullen, H.; Aber, A.; Sinisterra, J.; Ayub, K.; Amaya-Fuentes, R.; Wilson, S. Rapid Health Impact Assessment of a Proposed Poultry Processing Plant in Millsboro, Delaware. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 3429. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16183429
Baskin-Graves L, Mullen H, Aber A, Sinisterra J, Ayub K, Amaya-Fuentes R, Wilson S. Rapid Health Impact Assessment of a Proposed Poultry Processing Plant in Millsboro, Delaware. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2019; 16(18):3429. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16183429
Chicago/Turabian StyleBaskin-Graves, Leah, Haley Mullen, Aaron Aber, Jair Sinisterra, Kamran Ayub, Roxana Amaya-Fuentes, and Sacoby Wilson. 2019. "Rapid Health Impact Assessment of a Proposed Poultry Processing Plant in Millsboro, Delaware" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16, no. 18: 3429. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16183429
APA StyleBaskin-Graves, L., Mullen, H., Aber, A., Sinisterra, J., Ayub, K., Amaya-Fuentes, R., & Wilson, S. (2019). Rapid Health Impact Assessment of a Proposed Poultry Processing Plant in Millsboro, Delaware. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 16(18), 3429. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16183429