The development objective of the East Africa Public Health Laboratory Networking Project for Burundi is to establish a network of efficient, high quality, accessible public health laboratories for the diagnosis and surveillance of tuberculosis and other communicable diseases. Some of the negative impacts and mitigation measures include: (1) ensure that building designs takes into consideration of the needs of people with disabilities including access point for wheel chairs (including upstairs rooms) as well as provision of special washrooms and rams at the access points; (2) ensure fair and market prices are paid to suppliers commensurate to quality of goods and services rendered; (3) waste collection should be made at least once in 24 hours and it should be done in such a way to minimize nuisance of smell and dust during collection; (4) keep all construction equipment in good operating condition to reduce exhaust emissions; (5) use signage to warn staff and or visitors that are not involved in construction activities of dangerous places; and (6) adopt best transport safety practices with the goal of preventing traffic accidents and minimizing injuries suffered by project personnel and the public.
Information
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Auteur
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Date du document
2012/01/01
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Type de document
Évaluation environnementale
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Numéro du rapport
SFG1139
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Volume
8
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Total Volume(s)
9
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Pays
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Région
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Date de publication
2015/06/24
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Disclosure Status
Disclosed
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Titre du rapport
Environmental impact assessment for the proposed laboratory at Busia district
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Mots clé
waste, population densities, social costs, risks, treatment, fish, environmental quality, reclamation, environmental protection, people, environmental degradation, carbon dioxide, fossil fuels, air quality, waste management, organic wastes, pharmacists, environmental problems, carbon, burns, prevention, laws, agricultural production, morbidity, heavy metals, home care, emissions, health care, environmental issues, economic problems, sustainable management, incentives, emission reduction, health, holistic approach, crime, sustainable development, environmental health, community participation, public health, biological diversity, audits, life expectancy, radiation, hospital waste, knowledge, workplace, occupational health, air pollution, oil, ventilation, patient, patients, smoking, population growth, intervention, secondary schools, safety measures, ozone layer, options, migration, nurses, observation, radiation protection, pollution, disasters, forestry, aquifers, migrants, natural resources, metals, mortality, dermatitis, fishing, posters, cancer, land use, primary schools, resources, energy consumption, workers, environmental conservation, aged, environmental management, values, surveillance, environmental impacts, deforestation, hepatitis c, occupational safety, sustainable use, wounds, solid wastes, hepatitis b, stress, environments, property, decision making, dioxins, chemotherapy, environment, injuries, quality control, streams, quality of life, waste disposal, natural resource base, fisheries, economic development, communicable diseases, pregnant women, trade, first aid, land, children, comparative analysis, drinking water, ozone, public participation, safety education, isolation, farms, noise pollution, revenue, chlorine, recycling, strategy, sodium, registration, families, environmental, hospitals, wetlands, health services, implementation, hazardous wastes, environmental disasters, nursing, alcoholism
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