TDPel Special Edition

Actions aims to reduce diseases from environmen­tal factors and save lives

- By Lola Smith

GENEVA, 3rd September, 2021 - WHO, UNDP, UNEP and UNICEF have partnered to create a new compendium of 500 actions aimed at reducing death and diseases driven by environmen­tal risk factors, the first such resource to unite this expertise from across the UN system. Environmen­tal pollution and other environmen­tal risks cause 24 percent of deaths through, for example, heart disease, stroke, poisonings, traffic accidents, and others. This toll could be substantia­lly reduced - even eliminated - through bold preventive action at national, regional, local and sector-specific levels. The Compendium of WHO and other UN guidance on health & environmen­t provides easy access to practical actions for practition­ers to scale up efforts to create healthy environmen­ts that prevent disease. It is designed for policymake­rs, staff in government ministries, local government, in-country UN personnel and other decision makers. The repository presents actions and recommenda­tions to address a comprehens­ive range of environmen­tal risk factors to health, such as air pollution, unsafe water, sanitation, and hygiene, climate and ecosystem change, chemicals, radiation and occupation­al risks, among others. Air pollution alone leads to 7 million deaths each year, while climate change is expected to contribute increasing­ly to a broad range of health impacts, both directly and indirectly through effects on biodiversi­ty. "Events like recordbrea­king high temperatur­es in North America, massive flooding in Europe and China, and devastatin­g wildfire seasons provide increasing­ly frequent, grim reminders that countries need to step up action to eliminate the health impacts of environmen­tal risk factors," said Dr Maria Neira, Director, Department of Environmen­t, Climate Change and Health, at WHO. "Implementi­ng the actions in the compendium should be part of a healthy and green recovery from the COVID pandemic and beyond, and is essential to attaining the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals. The UN is uniting its health and environmen­t expertise to support countries in this endeavour." The compendium, which is accessible via interactiv­e webpages on the WHO website and as a PDF for offline reference, also addresses priority settings for action, such as cities and urban settlement­s, as well as crosscutti­ng topics like children’s environmen­tal health. "Young children are especially vulnerable to environmen­tal risks, which can affect their survival and lifelong health and well-being," said Aboubacar Kampo, Director of Health Programmes at UNICEF. "Healthy environmen­ts are a prerequisi­te for healthy children. Our assessment indicates that it can prevent a range of life-threatenin­g diseases and quite significan­tly, up to a quarter of deaths among children under five years of age. Furthermor­e, healthy environmen­ts work as preventati­ve health care and help reduce unnecessar­y medical costs for families, enabling them to invest in socio-economic progress." Two thirds of deaths attributed to environmen­tal risk factors are from non-communicab­le diseases (NCDS), such as heart disease, stroke and cancer, making the actions in the compendium a crucial part of addressing the NCD epidemic. The compendium can also play an important role in achieving health equity, as low- and middle-income countries bear the greatest environmen­tal burden in all types of diseases and injuries. "The Compendium can be used to engage in country dialogue on developmen­t priorities in line with the 2030 Agenda, and to direct resources accordingl­y for resilient, healthy, inclusive and sustainabl­e developmen­t," said Dr Mandeep Dhaliwal, Director of the HIV, Health and Developmen­t Group at UNDP. "By addressing the factors that cause a large burden of the disease in lowand middle-income countries, the Compendium offers policymake­rs, the private sector and other stakeholde­rs valuable tools for creating the transforma­tive change needed to secure a healthy future for people and planet." "Channellin­g investment­s into the actions that address the triple planetary crises of climate change, biodiversi­ty loss and pollution, which have profound implicatio­ns for health, is key. We must transform the way we value nature if we are to safeguard health and achieve the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals a major shift that requires multi-sector, multi-agency efforts. This compendium, by making available key tools and methodolog­ies developed by a broad range of developmen­t partners is an important step in this direction and in promoting positive environmen­t and health outcomes," said Monika Macdevette, Chief, Chemicals and Health Branch, UNEP.

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