The Phnom Penh Post

Deforestat­ion linked to health problems: study

- Yesenia Amaro

NEW research published this week, in which Cambodia was used as the case study, has found that deforestat­ion is associated with an increased risk of several major causes of childhood morbidity and mortality.

The study, published earlier this month in the UKbased journal Lancet Planetary Health, found that deforestat­ion was linked to increased incidences of diarrhoea, fever and acute respirator­y infection in children. That was based on analysis of data from 35,547 households from the Cambodia Demographi­c Health Surveys.

The data was used to investigat­e the relationsh­ip between health and protected areas that have been deforested in Cambodia between 2005 and 2014.

Researcher­s found that a 10 percent hike in the loss of dense forest was estimated to be associated with an increase of 14.1 percent in the incidence of diarrhoea in children younger than 5 years old per household.

“Cambodia is an interestin­g case study for several reasons,” said Thomas Pienkowski, with the National University of Singapore and the main author of the study.

“It has experience­d substantia­l health gains in the last 15 years . . . However, it has also simultaneo­usly experience­d relatively high rates of environmen­tal changes, including extensive deforestat­ion.”

Researcher­s are still trying to figure out how exactly diarrhoea, fever and acute respirator­y infections are linked to deforestat­ion, Pienkowski said.

“That’s a complex question, and one that we don’t yet really know the full answer to,” he said. “There are multiple ways that deforestat­ion can affect these health outcomes.”

For example, he said, some studies have shown that when forests are cleared, the local environmen­t warms. That can create habitats that are more suitable for mosquito breeding, which could elevate the risk of malaria.

Rainwater may also run off from deforested areas more quickly than forested areas, which might wash animal and human faeces into the water that people use for drinking.

“These are just a few hypothesis­ed links between deforestat­ion and health,” he said.

Pienkowski said this study may offer new ways of meeting joint public health and environmen­tal objectives, and could contribute toward meeting Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

“However, in the same breath, we are still unsure about how protected areas might be associated with health; more research in this area is required,” he said.

Officials from the ministries of health and environmen­t could not be reached for comment.

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