# Behavioral interventions related to plastic waste management in low-and middle-income countries: a systematic review using the behavior change wheel and the theoretical domains framework

**Authors:** Hina Raheel, Annalyse Ferguson, Sharon L Leslie, Vanessa Guardado-Menjivar, Kelsey Chen, Alina Merceron, Jessica Arciniegas, Amy E Lovvorn, Melinda Higgins, Dana Boyd Barr, Eri Saikawa, Margaret A Handley, Lisa M Thompson

PMC · DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ae49a3 · 2026-03-06

## TL;DR

This paper reviews how behavior change strategies can help manage plastic waste in low- and middle-income countries, using a framework to identify effective approaches.

## Contribution

This is the first systematic review using the Behavior Change Wheel to analyze plastic waste interventions in low-resource countries.

## Key findings

- Education is the most common intervention function used in plastic waste management strategies.
- Behavioral interventions focus heavily on environmental context and knowledge, but neglect emotional and identity-based domains.
- Integrating motivational and identity-based strategies could improve the sustainability of behavior change.

## Abstract

Addressing the mounting plastic waste problem requires system-level solutions, along with interventions that promote behavioral change. In low-resource countries, inadequate, if not absent, waste management systems lead to unsafe disposal practices, including open burning. While theory-informed approaches are essential for identifying enablers and barriers to target behavior change, their application is limited in these settings. Given the lack of a theory-driven synthesis of behavioral strategies to address plastic waste, this systematic review aimed to: (1) synthesize behavioral interventions related to plastic waste management in low-resource countries; (2) map these interventions to the behavior change wheel (BCW), using the capability-opportunity-motivation-behavior model, and the theoretical domains framework (TDF); and (3) classify implementation strategies to inform theory-driven intervention design. This review is the first to use the BCW to examine behavioral interventions related to plastic waste management in low-resource countries. Nine bibliographic databases: APA PsycInfo, CINAHL, Embase, Environment Complete, Global Health, GreenFile, Health Source: Nursing Academic, PubMed, and Web of Science Core Collection were searched. We included English-language human studies up to 9 April 2025, that evaluated interventions or policies targeting individual- or community-level behaviors related to plastic waste management in low-, lower-middle, or upper-middle income countries. We excluded studies from high-income countries, and those focused on environmental impacts, industrial or municipal waste streams, ecosystems or animals without human behavioral components, COVID-19-specific waste, or hypothetical modeling without real-life interventions. Forty-three studies met the inclusion criteria. Study quality was assessed using the mixed methods appraisal Tool. Interventions spanned 27 low-resource countries and targeted diverse populations, including schoolchildren, households, market vendors, and community organizations. Education was the most frequent BCW intervention function (76.7%), followed by environmental restructuring, incentivization, persuasion, and training. Mapping revealed that behavioral interventions relied most frequently on the TDF domains of environmental context, knowledge, skills, and social influences. Some domains, such as beliefs about capabilities, reinforcement, and identity, received moderate attention, while appealing to emotion or the use of behavioral regulation, were underutilized. Behavioral interventions for plastic waste management in low-resource countries have predominantly emphasized awareness-raising but insufficiently leveraged other BCW intervention functions and TDF domains. Integration of motivational, emotional, and identity-based strategies alongside structural support can enhance the sustainability of behavior change.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** waste (MESH:D019282), plastic (MESH:D010411), infection (MESH:D007239), COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382)
- **Chemicals:** water (MESH:D014867), plastic (MESH:D010969)
- **Species:** Nicotiana tabacum (American tobacco, species) [taxon 4097], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12965387/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12965387