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The Environment: Where's The Risk, And Where Are Children Safe?

Date:
June 28, 2004
Source:
World Health Organization
Summary:
Around the world, polluted air and water and other environment-related hazards kill more than three milion children under the age of five every year.
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BUDAPEST/GENEVA (22 JUNE 2004) -- Around the world, polluted air and water and other environment-related hazards kill more than three milion children under the age of five every year.

While industrialization, urban population growth, climate change, the increasing use of chemicals and environmental degradation expose children to risks that were unimagined a few generations ago, it is the old and largely understood basic threats that are still today responsible for killing most children: factors such as unsafe water, lack of sanitation, malaria and indoor air pollution.

Just 10% of the world's population is under five years of age, yet 40% of the environment-related disease burden falls on children in this age group. This is partly because they have a higher intake of harmful substances in relation to body weight, and partly because they have less strength and knowledge to protect themselves.

To illustrate the impact of the environment on children's health, the World Health Organization (WHO) is launching the first-ever Atlas of Children's Environmental Health and the Environment. Presented at the Fourth European Conference of Health and Environment Ministers in Budapest, Hungary, this book brings together a range of facts about the effects of environmental risks to our children's health, which, when taken together, paints a graphic picture of the hazards we all face and the reasons for over three million annual deaths in children under age five worldwide.1

"Children are the main sufferers of environmental hazards. It is unacceptable from every point of view that the most vulnerable members of a society should be the ones who pay the price for failures to protect health from environmental dangers," said Dr LEE Jong-wook, WHO Director-General, on the occasion of the launch.

The United Nations Millennium Declaration calls on governments to reduce by two-thirds the under-five mortality rate by 2015. This may be one of the most ambitious goals. "This is a wake-up call for us and for the world. The number of child deaths is alarming. It paints a dismal picture of neglect. We must face up to reality and act now to work towards a sustainable and brighter future," said Dr Kerstin Leitner, WHO Assistant Director-General for Sustainable Development and Healthy Environments.

Extensively illustrated, the Atlas clearly demonstrates the threats children face everywhere. It underscores the impact of poverty on children's health and the efforts needed to tackle environmental problems. It also discusses the relationship, interlinkages, and impact of the environment on the health of our children. While this crisis cannot be ignored and demands urgent action, success stories show a way forward for the world to make sure that our children will inherit a safer planet and a brighter future.

Health and the environment - some Atlas facts:

* Unclean water causes diarrhea, which kills an estimated 1.8 million people worldwide each year, 1.6 million of whom are children under five. It's also responsible for many diseases including cholera, dysentery, guinea worm, typhoid and intestinal worms.

* 86% of all urban wastewater in Latin America and the Caribbean, and 65% of all wastewater in Asia, is discharged untreated into rivers, lakes and oceans.

* The Ganges River alone has 1.1 million litres of raw sewage dumped into it every minute, a startling figure considering that one gram of faeces in untreated water may contain 10 million viruses, one million bacteria, 1000 parasite cysts and a hundred worm eggs. Diseases which result include diarrhoea, cholera, dysentery, typhoid, guinea worm, intestinal worms and trachoma.

* Nearly one million children die each year from diseases caused by air pollution inside their own homes. Over 75% of households in most Asian and African countries cook with solid fuels, such as wood, dung, coal or crop waste, which produce a black smoke that, when inhaled, may give rise to, or worsen pneumonia and other respiratory infections.

CD-ROM on Children, Environment and Health also launched today

WHO is also launching the first WHO global e-library on children's health and environment today. This "Budapest Collection" is made up of more than 100 documents concerning the effect on children's health of environmental risk factors (outdoor and indoor air pollution, water and sanitation, chemicals, injuries, food safety and nutrition, global climate change, socioeconomic determinants and tobacco); the documents were published by WHO Headquarters and its six Regional Offices between the Third Ministerial Conference on Environment and Health in London in 1999 and the Fourth Ministerial Conference taking place now in Budapest.

At the Third Ministerial Conference, Europe's Ministers of Health and Environment recognized the special vulnerability of children to environmental threats and committed to developing policies which would provide children with safe and healthy environments. Following this, a number of monographs, reports, journal articles have been produced which are now inserted in the Budapest Collection.

"This worldwide product represents an essential tool for policy-makers and scientists, providing multidisciplinary insights into how to reduce the impact of the environment on children's health," said Dr Roberto Bertollini, Director of Health Determinants, WHO Regional Office for Europe.

The CD-ROM is equipped with interactive search options that allow users to easily find, browse and download full-text documents in various languages. The Budapest Collection is a global project of the World Health Organization from Headquarters and the six Regional Offices and was developed by the WHO Regional Office for Europe's European Centre for Environment and Health in Rome. Copies of the "Budapest Collection" can be requested by writing to gcc@who.it or fgi@who.it .

1 This figure includes the deaths in children under five due to unsafe water and sanitation, indoor air pollution, outdoor air pollution and climate change as well as malaria.

RELATED LINKS

- Atlas (http://www.who.int/entity/ceh/publications/atlas/en/index.html)

- Children's environmental health (http://www.who.int/entity/ceh)


Story Source:

Materials provided by World Health Organization. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Cite This Page:

World Health Organization. "The Environment: Where's The Risk, And Where Are Children Safe?." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 28 June 2004. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2004/06/040623104827.htm>.
World Health Organization. (2004, June 28). The Environment: Where's The Risk, And Where Are Children Safe?. ScienceDaily. Retrieved December 17, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2004/06/040623104827.htm
World Health Organization. "The Environment: Where's The Risk, And Where Are Children Safe?." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2004/06/040623104827.htm (accessed December 17, 2024).

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