Neira noted that investments in strategies could reduce the rising burden of cardiovascular and respiratory diseases, injuries and cancer.
Following the recent report titled, ‘Preventing disease through healthy environments: a global assessment of the burden of disease from environmental risk’ by the World Health Organisation, over 12 million people have died from living in unhealthy areas.
Maria Neira,
Director of WHO’s director of the department of Public Health,
Environmental and Social Determinants of Health stated that there is an
urgent need to devise solutions to environmental risks in houses,
workplaces and public places.
Neira noted that investments in strategies could reduce the rising burden of cardiovascular and respiratory diseases, injuries and cancer.
“Environmental
risks take their greatest toll on young children and older people, the
report finds with children under five and adults aged 50 to 75 years
most impacted.
“The deaths of 1.7 million
children under five and 4.9 million adults aged 50 to 75 can be
prevented every year through better environmental management,’’ she said.
Children
under five are the most affected by lower respiratory infections and
diarrhoea while older people are most impacted by NCDs.
7.3
million Deaths were recorded in low and middle-income countries in the
WHO South-East Asia and western Pacific Regions in 2012.
Neira
stated that the low- and middle-income countries are viticms of
environment pollution and it leads to all types of diseases and
injuries.
“Looking across more than 100
disease and injury categories, the report finds that the vast majority
of environment-related deaths are due to cardiovascular diseases such as
stroke (2.5 million deaths annually) and Ischaemic heart disease (2.3
million deaths annually).
“Unintentional injuries such as road traffic accidents and cancer each account for 1.7 million deaths every year.
“Increasing access to safe water and adequate sanitation and promoting hand washing would further reduce diarrhoeal diseases.
“Furthermore,
tobacco smoke-free legislation reduces exposure to second-hand tobacco
smoke, and thereby also reduces cardiovascular diseases and respiratory
infections,’’ she said.
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