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Adult incontinence pad
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20 October 2022

Joint research has found adult incontinence products are a far bigger waste problem than baby nappies, and with an ageing population, the situation will get worse in the next decade.

A study involving ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø and Southern Cross University has found waste from adult incontinence products will outnumber infant nappies between four and 10 times by 2030, and researchers are calling for a multi-pronged approach for better waste management.

Co-author from ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø’s has been investigating the environmental lifecycle of baby nappies for more than a decade.

“There’s lots of discussion about the environmental impact of babies’ nappies, but our study shows that adult absorbent hygiene products presents a larger and faster growing waste issue,” Professor O’Brien said.

“This study is about opening-up the conversation to how we can better manage waste and consider other solutions going forward.”

In Australia, most used disposable nappies are sent to landfill, producing greenhouse gases and leachate (water) emissions.

The research showed that while the waste from infant nappies will likely remain constant over the next decade, the waste from adult products will increase.

Lead author and Southern Cross University environmental engineer Dr Emma Thompson Brewster said while more absorbent hygiene products (AHP) brands were presenting environmental-friendly marketing in Australia, all were sidestepping the elephant in the room.

“The burden on parents to choose the ‘best’ nappy product for their infants places unnecessary stress on many Australian parents, at a time while they are already experiencing the many stresses of raising small children,” Dr Thompson Brewster said.

“Used adult absorbent hygiene products receive far less public attention, but have comparable or greater impact on our community health, environmental health and taxpayers.

“This is due to the nation’s ageing population and associated age-related health conditions.

“While our expertise is on the waste management side of the problem, the trend highlights the heavily stigmatised issue of incontinence in the over-65 years population, which may have better solutions related to improved access to medical treatment like physiotherapy.”

The research recommends reducing stigma around adult incontinence and increasing access to health services, creating affordable and accessible biodegradable AHP products for infants and adults, and designing policies, systems and infrastructure to divert used AHP waste from landfill and into resource recovery processes.

The research is published in .

Media: ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Communications, communications@uq.edu.au, +61 (0)429 056 139