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Relation between environment and health

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Title: Relation between environment and health


1
  • Relation between environment and health
  • Prof. Madi Al Jaghbeer

2
  • Content
  • Definition of health and environment.
  • Theories of disease causation.
  • Environmental diseases.
  • Environmental health.
  • Environmental health actions (interventions).

3
  • Health according to WHO is a state of complete
    physical , mental and social well-being and not
    merely the absence of disease or infirmity .
  • Environment everything that surrounds us that
    is affected by us and is affecting us .

4
  • Theories of diseases causation
  • Humoral theory (Hippocrates).
  • Contagion theory (Fracastoro).
  • Germ theory ( Pasteur , Lister and Koch).
  • Current disease concepts .

5
  • Humoral theory (Hippocrates) 430-330 B.C.
  • The Human body contains blood, phlegm , yellow
    bile and black bile . These are the things that
    make up its constitution and causes its pains and
    its health .
  • Health is primarily a state in which these
    constituent substances are in the correct
    proportion to each other both in strength and
    quantity and are well mixed .

6
  • Diseases arise from humoral imbalances and
    imbalances arise from natural causes
  • Heredity phlegmatic parents have phlegmatic
    children .
  • Regimen Diet and other behavior .
  • Climate Temperature , wind and moisture .

7
  • Treatment either addresses
  • The causes of humoral imbalance change in diet
    or environment.
  • Humoral imbalance itself rid body of excess
    bile or phlegm (induce vomiting , evacuation of
    bowels and veins were opened to let blood ).

8
  • Contagion theory (Fracastoro) 1546
  • Contagion is a corruption which develops in the
    substance of a combination , passes from one
    thing to another and is originally caused by
    infection of the imperceptible particles .
  • He called the particles Seminaria (seeds).
  • Differences between diseases are explained by
    theyre having different active particles
    different seeds.

9
  • He did not abandon the humoral theory he blended
    it with his contagion theory suggesting that
    seeds for different diseases have different
    affinities for different humors .
  • Treatment destroy or expel the seeds of
    contagion
  • Destroy extreme heat and cold.
  • Expel bowel movements , urination , sweating
    and blood-letting .

10
  • Germ Theory
  • Pasteur (1850s) Was able to show that yeast
    increased in weight , nitrogen and carbon content
    during fermentation , inferring that yeast is a
    living organism that is a cause of fermentation
    in beer and wine .
  • He challenged the theory of spontaneous
    generation fermentation does not take place in
    absence of contamination by air.

11
  • Joseph Lister (1867) appreciated the
    significance of Pasteurs theory , and stated
    it is not to its oxygen or to any of its gaseous
    constituents that the air owes this property but
    to minute particles suspended in it which are the
    germs of various low forms of life .
  • Robert Koch (1870-1880) there are many
    different kinds of bacteria and specific kinds
    are responsible for specific disease .

12
  • Current disease concepts
  • 1890 researchers has recognized that microbes
    much smaller than bacteria are responsible for
    rabies and many other diseases , modern concept
    of virus originated.
  • 1930s antibiotic cures for bacterial infections
    .

13
  • Researchers in 20th century have revealed other
    causes of disease (other than infectious)
  • Genetic 2) nutritional 3) immunological
  • 4) metabolic 5) cytological .
  • Modern medicine classifies diseases according to
  • Organ systems cardiovascular , renal ,
    respiratory etc
  • Pathogenesis oncology , infectious , metabolic
    , nutritional etc

14
  • Environmental diseases
  • Lesions and diseases caused by exposure to
    chemical or physical agents in the ambient ,
    workplace , and personal environment .
  • Personal environment environment that pertains
    more to the individual and is greatly influenced
    by use of tobacco , alcohol ingestion ,
    therapeutic and non-therapeutic drug consumption
    and the likes.

15
  • Factors in the personal environment generally
    have a larger effect on human health than does
    the ambient environment .
  • Environmental diseases could be encountered due
    to
  • Disasters (Chernobyl nuclear accident ).
  • Chronic exposure to relatively low levels of
    contaminants .

16
  • Sensitivity of individual towards contaminants is
    affected by various factors
  • Age .
  • 2)Genetic predisposition.
  • 3) different tissue sensitivities of exposed
    persons.

17
  • Important environmental diseases
  • Lung diseases
  • Asthma plant pollen , dust , mold and animal
    dander.
  • Black lung disease coal miners lungs become
    coated with coal dust causes chronic condition in
    which breathing becomes painful and difficult.

18
  • 3) Bronchitis Fire-fighters and smokers are at
    increased risk .
  • 4) Asbestosis breathing asbestos causes severe
    lung disorder could lead to lung cancer ,
    asbestos was used for insulation in houses ,
    schools and work-places before laws were passed
    to ban its use .
  • 5) Silicosis Lung disease caused by exposure to
    the silica in the dust of clay . Pottery workers
    are at increased risk .

19
  • Cancers
  • beside lung cancer , environmental toxins that
    could lead to cancers pesticides , herbicides ,
    radioactive substances.
  • Liver or bladder cancer in people working in
    plastic manufacturing.
  • Lung cancer asbestos , chromium and coal tar.

20
  • Gulf war syndrome
  • many US veterans have complained about symptoms
    that they attribute to their participation in the
    Persian Gulf war in 1991.
  • Symptoms chronic fatigue , aching muscles and
    joints , skin rashes , memory loss , miscarriages
    and babies born with birth defects.
  • Scientists do not know main cause but argue that
    veterans might be reacting to chemical weapons ,
    biological weapons , pesticides , vaccines , oil
    fires or infectious diseases that they were
    exposed to .

21
  • Sick building syndrome
  • People attribute a variety of symptoms to the
    building were they work .
  • Common complaints headaches , dizziness ,
    nausea , tiredness , concentration problems ,
    sensitivity to odors , dry itchy skin , dry cough
    , irritated eyes , nose and throat .

22
  • generally as soon as affected people leave the
    building their symptoms vanish and they feel well
    again .
  • Factors that may contribute
  • Humidity
  • poor ventilation
  • poor temperature control
  • pollution from outdoor sources (pollen , car
    exhaust or smoke )
  • chemicals from inside the building ( cleaning
    agents , glues , copy machine chemicals )
  • Bacteria ,viruses and molds .

23
  • Birth defects infertility , miscarriages ,
    still birth , childhood cancer and birth defects
    may have links to environmental toxins (pregnant
    woman exposed to lead her child has high risk of
    being born with behavior and nervous system
    problems).
  • Chemical poisoning lead , mercury and cadmium.

24
  • Environmental health
  • According to World Health Organization is the
    control of all factors in the environment which
    exercise a harmful effect on mans physical
    development , health and survival .
  • The WHOs definition is not all-inclusive in
    terms of the natural environment , and includes
    only those aspects that are modifiable (not
    necessarily immediately but with solutions that
    are already available ) .

25
  • Examples of included environmental factors
  • 1) pollution of air , water , or soil with
    chemical or biological agents
  • 2) UV and ionizing radiation ( although natural
    UV radiation from space is not modifiable or only
    in a limited way such as by reducing substances
    that destroy the ozone layer ) , individual
    behavior to protect oneself against UV radiation
    is modifiable .
  • 3) noise , electromagnetic field .
  • 4) occupational risks.
  • 5) built environments including housing , land
    use patterns and roads.
  • 6) agricultural methods , irrigation schemes.
  • 7) man-made climate change , ecosystem change.
  • 8) behavior related to the availability of safe
    water and sanitation facilities such as washing
    hands and contaminating food with unsafe water or
    unclean hands

26
  • Examples of excluded environmental factors
  • 1) alcohol and tobacco consumption and drug
    abuse.
  • 2) diet (although it could be argued that food
    availability influences diet ).
  • 3) the natural environments of vectors that
    cannot reasonably modified (e.g. in rivers , in
    lakes , in wetlands) .
  • 4) unemployment (provided that it is not related
    to environmental degradation , occupational
    disease, etc).
  • 5) natural biologic agents such as pollen in the
    outdoor environment.
  • 6) person to-person transmission that cannot
    reasonably be prevented through environmental
    interventions such as improving housing ,
    introducing sanitary hygiene or making
    improvements in the occupational environment.

27
  • Environmental health actions (interventions)
  • First action (Sir Edwin Chadwick ) .
  • Current actions (WHO) .

28
  • First environmental health action
  • Environmental health has its origins in the early
    1800s. The first public health act was
    introduced in 1842 as the result of a report made
    to parliament by Sir Edwin Chadwick on the
    sanitary conditions of the laboring population of
    Great Britain . The report told the story of
    disease caused , aggravated and spread by damp
    and atmospheric impurities produced by
    decomposing waste and overcrowding

29
  • In his report Sir Chadwick stated that the
    annual loss from filth and bad ventilation are
    greater than the loss from death or wounds in any
    wars in which the country has been engaged in
    modern times . He also stated the younger
    population bred up under noxious physical
    agencies is inferior in physical organization and
    general health to a population preserved from the
    presence of such agencies .

30
  • Current environmental health actions
  • Environmental burden of disease (EBD).
  • Country profiles of EBD .
  • Health impact assessment .

31
  • Environmental Burden of disease
  • quantifies the amount of disease caused by
    environmental risks .
  • through death incidence or DALY .
  • DALY (disability adjusted life years ) time
    based measure that combines years of life lost
    due to premature mortality and years of life lost
    due to time lived in states of less than full
    health .

32
  • WHO report (2006 ) states that approximately one
    quarter of the global disease burden and more
    than one third of the burden among children is
    due to modifiable environmental factors.
  • Environmentally mediated disease burden is much
    higher in the developing countries (communicable
    diseases) although in cases of certain
    non-communicable diseases ( CVD and cancers ) it
    is larger in developed countries.

33
  • Children bear the highest death toll with more
    than 4 million environmentally caused death per
    year especially in developing countries.
  • Diseases with high EBD
  • Diarrhea 94 of the diarrheal burden of disease
    is attributable to environment and is associated
    with risk factors such as unsafe-drinking water
    and poor sanitation and hygiene
  • Lower respiratory tract infections 20 in
    developed countries and 42 in developing.

34
  • 3) Other unintentional injuries from workplace
    hazards , radiation and industrial accidents 44
  • 4) Malaria 42 .
  • Total number of lives lost each year as result of
    environmental factors was 15 times higher in
    developing countries than developed countries.

35
  • Means of reducing EBD
  • Promotion of safe household water storage.
  • better hygiene measures.
  • use of safer and cleaner fuels.
  • more judicious use and management of toxic
    substances in home and work place .
  • poverty reduction , well-being and economic
    development.
  • Cooperation between health sectors and other
    sectors such as energy , transport , agriculture
    and industry .

36
  • Country profile of environmental burden of
    disease
  • Updated country data on the burden of disease
    that is preventable through healthier
    environments.
  • it provides an overview of summary information on
    selected parameters that describe the
    environmental health situation of a country as
    well as preliminary estimates of health impacts
    caused by environmental risks .

37
  • These country estimates are a milestone in a
    first step to assist national decision makers in
    the sectors of health and environment to set
    priorities for preventive actions .
  • 1st step quantifying the burden.
  • 2nd step for countries to select appropriate
    interventions .

38
  • Health impact assessment (HIA)
  • According to WHO is a combination of procedures ,
    methods and tools by which policy or project may
    be judged as to its potential effects on health
    of the population and the distribution of those
    effects within the population .

39
  • Value of HIA
  • Better informed decision-makers and decisions.
  • healthier land uses and community designs .
  • increased awareness and understanding of health
    consequences .
  • Challenges of HIA
  • Lack of time
  • Lack of resources (human and money ) .

40
Thank you very much
41
  • References
  • 1)World health organization environmental
    health topics .
  • 2)The concept of disease structure and change
    Paul Thagard University of Waterloo-Ontario
    Philosophy department (1997)
  • 3) Robbins basic pathology Kumar , Abbas,
    Fausto and Mitchell 8th edition chapter 8
    (2007)
  • 4) Environmental diseases U.S. National Center
    for Environmental Health (NCEH), Centers for
    Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

42
  • 5) WHO Quantification of the disease burden
    attributable to environmental risk factors
    (2006).
  • 6) Chadwicks report on Sanitary conditions
    Laura Del Col West Virginia University (2002)
  • 7) Health impact Assessment Quick guide
    National Association of County and city health
    officials (2008) .
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