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Featured researches published by Lubna Alam.


Environmental Health | 2011

Natural radionuclide of Po210 in the edible seafood affected by coal-fired power plant industry in Kapar coastal area of Malaysia

Lubna Alam; Che Abd Rahim Mohamed

BackgroundPo210 can be accumulated in various environmental materials, including marine organisms, and contributes to the dose of natural radiation in seafood. The concentration of this radionuclide in the marine environment can be influenced by the operation of a coal burning power plant but existing studies regarding this issue are not well documented. Therefore, the aim of this study was to estimate the Po210 concentration level in marine organisms from the coastal area of Kapar, Malaysia which is very near to a coal burning power plant station and to assess its impact on seafood consumers.MethodsConcentration of Po210 was determined in the edible muscle of seafood and water from the coastal area of Kapar, Malaysia using radiochemical separation and the Alpha Spectrometry technique.ResultsThe activities of Po210 in the dissolved phase of water samples ranged between 0.51 ± 0.21 and 0.71 ± 0.24 mBql-1 whereas the particulate phase registered a range of 50.34 ± 11.40 to 72.07 ± 21.20 Bqkg-1. The ranges of Po210 activities in the organism samples were 4.4 ± 0.12 to 6.4 ± 0.95 Bqkg-1 dry wt in fish (Arius maculatus), 45.7 ± 0.86 to 54.4 ± 1.58 Bqkg-1 dry wt in shrimp (Penaeus merguiensis) and 104.3 ± 3.44 to 293.8 ± 10.04 Bqkg-1 dry wt in cockle (Anadara granosa). The variation of Po210 in organisms is dependent on the mode of their life style, ambient water concentration and seasonal changes. The concentration factors calculated for fish and molluscs were higher than the recommended values by the IAEA. An assessment of daily intake and received dose due to the consumption of seafood was also carried out and found to be 2083.85 mBqday-1person-1 and 249.30 μSvyr-1 respectively. These values are comparatively higher than reported values in other countries. Moreover, the transformation of Po210 in the human body was calculated and revealed that a considerable amount of Po210 can be absorbed in the internal organs. The calculated values of life time mortality and morbidity cancer risks were 24.8 × 10-4 and 34 × 10-4 respectively which also exceeded the recommended limits set by the ICRP.ConclusionsThe findings of this present study can be used to evaluate the safety dose uptake level of seafood as well as to monitor environmental health. However, as the calculated dose and cancer risks were found to cross the limit of safety, finding a realistic way to moderate the risk is imperative.


Archive | 2018

Watershed Pollutants: Risk Assessment and Management of Chemicals and Hazardous Substances

Mazlin Mokhtar; Goh Choo Ta; Lubna Alam; Mohd Talib Latif

Watersheds provide ecological services that benefit flora and fauna, and people are also benefited from the ecological services, particularly for living and development purposes. Hence, watersheds must be managed in holistic and integrated manners to ensure their sustainability. Nonetheless, rapid development has polluted watersheds, and some of the watershed pollutants are chemicals and hazardous substances. This chapter explains the concept of chemical risk and introduces a framework for chemical risk assessment and management that takes into account the importance of human and environmental health. The chapter also discusses chemicals that cause air pollution (such as ground-level ozone and asbestos) and water pollution (such as different types of heavy metals). In the conclusion, this chapter highlights that we cannot avoid dealing with chemicals in our daily life but we can reduce the risks associated with them.


Archive | 2018

Environmental Scan and Framework of Watershed Risk Assessment in Malaysia

Lubna Alam; Mazlin Mokhtar; Goh Choo Ta; Khai Ern Lee; Mohd Talib Latif

Water is not only a resource, it is a life source; therefore, the water should be healthy, secure, and sustainable for people. Watersheds are nature’s boundaries for surface water supplies, and thus, the quality of the drinking water at a consumer’s tap depends on the quality of watershed. The risk assessment which is a process used to define the probability and magnitude of adverse effects of an environment from stressors can be used to estimate the costs and benefits of changes in a watershed in terms of risk. This chapter describes the source of pollution and the framework for assessing risk in Malaysian watershed.


Archive | 2018

An Integrated Approach for Stakeholder Participation in Watershed Management

Khai Ern Lee; Ramli Abdullah; Marlia M. Hanafiah; Azhar Abdul Halim; Mazlin Mokhtar; Choo Ta Goh; Lubna Alam

Water is an essential element for life. However, the rapid urbanization and industrial development in the past decades have put stress on water resources. Water resource management is intended to solve watershed problems on a sustainable basis, and these problems can be categorized into lack of water (quantity), deterioration in water quality, ecological effects, poor public participation, and low output economic value for investment in watershed-related activities. Involvement of stakeholders is of utmost importance to ensure no one is left behind in the sustainable management of water resources. Hence, an integrated approach has emerged as a shift from the structural approach to a nonstructural approach, that is, from engineering-based solutions to community-based solutions, aiming to induce policy-driven institutional change, particularly the coordination and integration of multiple stakeholders toward sustainable watershed management


Archive | 2018

Institutional Arrangement and Legal Framework for the Management of Watersheds in Malaysia

Goh Choo Ta; Mazlin Mokhtar; Khai Ern Lee; Lubna Alam

Due to inadequate planning, rapid development and urbanization have polluted watersheds. Hence, watersheds must be managed properly to ensure their sustainability, by taking into account the importance of landscape and ecology and different socio-economic conditions, culture and religion. Among others, one of the ways to enhance watershed management is via adequate institutional arrangement and legal framework. This chapter has selected Malaysia as a case study, and by focusing on the discharge of pollutants, this chapter demonstrates how both federal and state governments complement each other to strengthen the regulatory framework in preventing pollution in watersheds. While the federal government regulates the discharge from manufacturing processes, the state government regulates activities that are not covered by the federal government, such as aquaculture and farming.


International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2018

Health Risk of Polonium 210 Ingestion via Drinking Water: An Experience of Malaysia

Minhaz Farid Ahmed; Lubna Alam; Che Abd Rahim Mohamed; Mazlin Mokhtar; Goh Choo Ta

The presence of toxic polonium-210 (Po-210) in the environment is due to the decay of primordial uranium-238. Meanwhile, several studies have reported elevated Po-210 radioactivity in the rivers around the world due to both natural and anthropogenic factors. However, the primary source of Po-210 in Langat River, Malaysia might be the natural weathering of granite rock along with mining, agriculture and industrial activities. Hence, this is the first study to determine the Po-210 activity in the drinking water supply chain in the Langat River Basin to simultaneously predict the human health risks of Po-210 ingestion. Therefore, water samples were collected in 2015–2016 from the four stages of the water supply chain to analyze by Alpha Spectrometry. Determined Po-210 activity, along with the influence of environmental parameters such as time-series rainfall, flood incidents and water flow data (2005–2015), was well within the maximum limit for drinking water quality standard proposed by the Ministry of Health Malaysia and World Health Organization. Moreover, the annual effective dose of Po-210 ingestion via drinking water supply chain indicates an acceptable carcinogenic risk for the populations in the Langat Basin at 95% confidence level; however, the estimated annual effective dose at the basin is higher than in many countries. Although several studies assume the carcinogenic risk of Po-210 ingestion to humans for a long time even at low activity, however, there is no significant causal study which links Po-210 ingestion via drinking water and cancer risk of the human. Since the conventional coagulation method is unable to remove Po-210 entirely from the treated water, introducing a two-layer water filtration system at the basin can be useful to achieve SDG target 6.1 of achieving safe drinking water supplies well before 2030, which might also be significant for other countries.


Scienceasia | 2012

Accumulation pattern of heavy metals in marine organisms collected from a coal burning power plant area of Malacca Strait

Lubna Alam; Che Abd Rahim Mohamed; Mazlin Mokhtar


Asian Journal of Water, Environment and Pollution | 2015

Assessment of Environmental and Human Health Risk for Contamination of Heavy Metal in Tilapia Fish Collected from Langat Basin, Malaysia

Lubna Alam; Mazlin Mokhtar; Md. Mahmudul Alam; Md. Azizul Bari; Nicholas Kathijotes; Goh Choo Ta; Lee Khai Ern


Journal of Chemical Health and Safety | 2016

Enhancing the regulatory framework for upstream chemicals management in Malaysia: Some proposals from an academic perspective

Goh Choo Ta; Chan Kok Meng; Mazlin Mokhtar; Lee Khai Ern; Lubna Alam; Mohamad Mahathir Amir Sultan; Nur Liyana Ali


Asian Journal of Water, Environment and Pollution | 2016

A Review on the Environmental Pollution of Langat River, Malaysia

Minhaz Farid Ahmed; Lubna Alam; Goh Choo Ta; Che Abd Rahim Mohamed; Mazlin Mokhtar

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Mazlin Mokhtar

National University of Malaysia

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Che Abd Rahim Mohamed

National University of Malaysia

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Goh Choo Ta

National University of Malaysia

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Minhaz Farid Ahmed

National University of Malaysia

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Khai Ern Lee

National University of Malaysia

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Mohd Talib Latif

National University of Malaysia

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Khan Kamal Uddin Ahmed

Bangladesh Fisheries Research Institute

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Nicholas Kathijotes

Cyprus University of Technology

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