Bangkok Post

Environmen­tal risks kill 1.7m kids

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More than one in four deaths in children below the age of five are linked to polluted environmen­ts, according to two new World Health Organizati­on (WHO) reports published last week.

Each year, environmen­tal risks such as indoor and outdoor pollution, second-hand smoke, unsafe water and poor sanitation kill around 1.7 million children between the ages of one month and five years, the reports found.

Harmful exposure can start in the mother’s womb, increasing the risk of premature birth, which can lead to lifelong health problems.

When children are exposed to air pollutants they also can face a lifelong increased risk of chronic respirator­y diseases, like asthma, and of heart disease, stroke and cancer.

The findings were in line with a WHO study published last year showing that about a quarter of all deaths worldwide, across all age groups, were attributab­le to environmen­tal factors like air, water and soil pollution, as well as unsafe roads and workplace stress.

But the new reports highlight the particular dangers faced by the youngest in society. “A polluted environmen­t is a deadly one, particular­ly for young children,” WHO chief Margaret Chan said.

“Their developing organs and immune systems, and smaller bodies and airways, make them especially vulnerable to dirty air and water.”

An estimated 570,000 children below the age of five die each year from respirator­y infections such as pneumonia, which are attributab­le to air pollution and second-hand smoke, the reports found.

And 361,000 others are killed by diarrhoea resulting from poor access to clean water, sanitation and hygiene, the agency said. Another 200,000 children under five die from unintentio­nal injuries linked to unhealthy environmen­ts, including poisonings, falls and drowning, WHO said.

The agency emphasised that a large portion of deaths among children stemming from common causes like diarrhoea, malaria and pneumonia could be prevented by reducing environmen­tal risks.

Simply increasing access to safe water and clean cooking fuels, removing unsafe building materials like lead paint and reducing the use of hazardous pesticides and chemicals could go a long way in preventing such deaths, the reports said.

A full 200,000 deaths each year among children below the age of five due to malaria, for example, could be avoided through actions like reducing breeding sites for mosquitoes and covering drinking water storage, the WHO said.

At the same time, a range of new environmen­tal hazards are emerging, like the ballooning piles of discarded mobile phones and other electronic and electrical waste, which is expected to hit 50 million metric tonnes globally by next year.

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