How To Reduce Premature Deaths Linked to Environmental Risks

[Phas­ing out com­bus­tion-based ener­gy such as fos­sil fuels and bio­mass ener­gy can save lives]

– by Nan­cy C. Loeb and Juli­et S. Sorensen, April 8, 2016, Truthout

Mil­lions of deaths around the world are pre­ventable every year with­out any addi­tion­al spend­ing on research for treat­ment. And the cause has noth­ing to do with gun vio­lence or war.

Accord­ing to a new report from the World Health Orga­ni­za­tion (WHO), approx­i­mate­ly 12.6 mil­lion peo­ple die glob­al­ly each year as a result of envi­ron­men­tal expo­sures. More than 8 mil­lion of those deaths are caused by expo­sures to non-infec­tious or par­a­sitic forms of envi­ron­men­tal risks, includ­ing air pol­lu­tion and sec­ond­hand smoke.

Low- and mid­dle-income coun­tries in South­east Asia, the West­ern Pacif­ic and Africa account for most of those deaths. But some of the envi­ron­men­tal risk is com­ing from the Unit­ed States, which con­tin­ues to export coal to poor coun­tries. Why the urgency? There are steps we can take imme­di­ate­ly to stop some of the pre­ma­ture deaths.

First, using prod­ucts that sig­nif­i­cant­ly reduce air pol­lu­tion expo­sures will help. More than 3 bil­lion peo­ple around the world still cook and heat their homes using open fires that burn sol­id waste such as wood, crop wastes, ani­mal dung and coal for fuel.

When that fuel is burned, it releas­es small par­tic­u­lates — more com­mon­ly known as soot — that con­tribute to pre­ma­ture deaths, espe­cial­ly in chil­dren and old­er peo­ple, from asth­ma, pneu­mo­nia, heart dis­ease, chron­ic obstruc­tive pul­monary dis­ease (COPD) and lung cancer.

READ MORE at Truthout


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