Environmental Pollutants, Neurocognitive Disorders and Other Health Outcomes in Autochthones Populations Worldwide
A special issue of Toxics (ISSN 2305-6304). This special issue belongs to the section "Neurotoxicity".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2024) | Viewed by 9561
Special Issue Editors
Interests: mercury poisoning; neurologic; neurologic plumbism; arsenic encephalopathy; cadmium; air pollutants; environmental; indigenous health service; american Indians; First Nations; epidemiology; Amazon
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: environmental health; risk assessment; environmental contamination; indigenous populations; Amazon; health communication
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The Special Issue "Environmental Pollutants, Neurocognitive Disorders and Other Health Outcomes in Autochthones Populations Worldwide" aims to identify ongoing research devoted to exploring and debating the current findings about neurocognitive disorders due to exposure to environmental pollutants, focusing on, but not restricted to, the harmful effects of mercury poisoning from gold mining activities, especially under indigenous and traditional populations worldwide. We encourage authors to submit papers and share with us their fresher studies, in order to give more visibility to the topic, and contribute to clarifying uncertainty points about the theme, as well as valorize the perspectives of the native people affected.
The topic of global pollutants has gained great visibility on the public health agenda in recent times. Catastrophes such as the Minamata Disaster, the Iraq grain poisoning, and Burkina Faso gold mining pollution have spread several health problems related to mercury contamination to the affected communities. The aluminum toxic spill in Hungary, the Exxon Valdez and Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the USA, lead poisoning in the Dominican Republic, the Bhopal gas tragedy in India, toxic waste dumping in Ivory Coast, and the Dioxin disaster in Seveso, Italy are emblematic examples of the problems related to this Special Issue, "Environmental Pollutants, Neurocognitive Disorders and Other Health Outcomes in Autochthones Populations Worldwide". More recently, the Brumadinho dam collapses in Brazil and the impacts promoted by illegal gold mining activities on the Amazon's traditional territories have affected many people in Latin America, revealing the importance of researchers from different parts of the world contributing to this Special Issue.
Prof. Dr. Paulo Cesar Basta
Dr. Ana Claudia Santiago De Vasconcellos
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- mercury poisoning
- neurologic
- neurologic plumbism
- arsenic encephalopathy
- cadmium
- air pollutants
- environmental
- indigenous health service
- American Indians
- First Nations
- epidemiology
- amazon
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