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Toxic chemicals, microbial contaminants rapidly degrading natural environment

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Experts believe that toxic chemicals and microbial contaminants/agents created by natural and anthropogenic activities, that are rapidly becoming environmental hazards (EH) with increased potential to affect the natural environment and human health. Talking to media they opined that the interaction between human health and environmental hazards has been extensively interlinked, that was repeatedly researched and studied on latest scientific methods. In the race for economic development, gains and prosperity, our earth is becoming more vulnerable to climate change impacts and pollution caused by anthropological activities with each passing day, they lamented. Talking to media they opined that technological advances in agriculture and rapid industrialization have drastically polluted the two pillars of natural resources, i.e land and water. Toxic chemicals and microbial contaminants/agents created by natural and anthropogenic activities, that are rapidly becoming environmental hazards (EH) with increased potential to affect the natural environment and human health. In this connection noted pulmonologist Dr. Zeeshan from Jinnah Hospital Lahore says the environment has serious effects on our health in a variety of ways, by significantly impacting human health in two ways, either directly by exposing people to harmful carbon-agents or indirectly, by disrupting life-sustaining ecosystems. The World Health Organization (WHO) in its recent report has given its estimation that thirteen million deaths annually are attributable to preventable environmental causes.

The report also estimates that 24 percent of the global disease burden (healthy life per year loss) and 23 percent of all deaths i.e. premature mortality are attributable to environmental factors, with the environmental burden of diseases, being 15 times higher in developing countries than in developed countries, occur due to differences in exposure to environmental risks and non-availability of access to health care amid the environmental reasons. The report further says that five children in developing countries in every one minute die from malaria or diarrhoea. Likewise, 100 children die every hour, as a result of exposure to indoor smoke from solid or fossil fuels. Similarly, nearly 1,800 people, every day die in megacities of the developing countries as a result of exposure to endangered urban air pollution. And, every month, nearly 19,000 people in developing countries die from unintentional poisonings. Noted environmentalist Dr. Shafqat Munir Ahmad told APP that huge economic development and multiplying population are resulting in prevailing environmental degradation. Intensification of industrialization, agriculture and increasing energy use were the most severe driving forces of environmental health problems.

For developing countries, severe lack of public infrastructure, such as access to clean drinking water, lack of health care, and sanitation issues were generated due to emerging problems of industrial pollution (as mushrooming of industrial units without planning is creating significant issues of public health, he added. Climate change is directly posing threats to human health and well-being and this is rapidly emerging as a serious health concern worldwide, he said adding that in the year 2000, climate change was estimated to be responsible for approximately 2.4 percent of worldwide diarrhoea and 6 percent of malaria. But now, according to the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) third assessment report, the world temperature is expected to further rise during the current century.

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