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Polluted environment kills millions of children each year: WHO

Tue, Jul 31, 2007

Environment, Health & Fitness

A news report by the U.N. World Health Organization says that environmental hazards are responsible for the deaths of several million children every year. The report, titled Principles for Evaluating Health Risks in Children Associated with Exposure to Chemicals, highlights the fact that in children, the stage in their development when exposure occurs may be just as important as the magnitude of the exposure.

It’s WHO’s first ever report focusing on children’s special susceptibility to harmful chemical exposures at different periods of their growth. “Children are not just small adults,” said Dr Terri Damstra, the Geneva-based WHO’s team leader for the Interregional Research Unit. “Children are especially vulnerable and respond differently from adults when exposed to environmental factors - and this response may differ according to the different periods of development they are going through.”

According to the expert, children’s lungs are not fully developed at birth, or even at the age of eight, and lung maturation may be altered by air pollutants that induce acute respiratory effects in childhood and may be the origin of chronic respiratory disease later in life.

The report points out that air and water contaminants, pesticides in food, lead in soil, as well many other environmental threats which alter the delicate organism of a growing child may cause or worsen disease and induce developmental problems. Over 30 percent of the global burden of disease in children can be attributed to environmental factors, the report says.

According to the report, the vulnerability of children is increased in degraded and poor environments. Neglected and malnourished children suffer the most. One in five children in the poorest parts of the world will not live longer than their fifth birthday - mainly because of environment-related diseases.

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This post was written by:

Rubab Saleem - who has written 2897 posts on Pakistan Times!.


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2 Comments For This Post

  1. zanzibar Says:

    This kind of stuff doesn’t just ‘happen’- why does this article not fulfill its journalistic duty of pointing out some major injustrial pollutors- the causes of this death? Coco-Cola, Monsanto, Haynes, etc.
    Maybe then people could make a connection between the tragedy and their lifestyle, and work towards change- but as long as you publishe such vauge musings, you are only playing to the ends of the pollutors- and the death they cause.

  2. cakmoki Says:

    in our country, acute respiratory diseases is serious problem … related environmental factors, overcrowded, behaviour, etc. About 21-40% incidence rate acute respiratory diseases every year.

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