Monday, April 7, 2008

World Health Day - 7th April

Today, 7 April is observed the world over as World Health day.It marks the anniversary of the World Health Organization(WHO), commemorating its 60th year of unflinching commitment to the establishment of global health. Every year this day is observed as World health day, and organized around a predetermined theme to raise awareness of key global public health challenges.
World Health Day, this year, embodies the theme, ‘Protect Health from Climatic Change’.
Each year, The World Health Day, seeks to attract worldwide attention on imminent public health challenges facing the world. Global warming and its causative factors is a growing preoccupation amongst world bodies, owing to its impact on the global landscape and health of the population. The initiatives of the World Health Day, 2008, hope to explore the strategies required to protect health of population worldwide from the ravages of climatic changes.
Understanding Impact of Climatic Changes on Health :
It is common to expect that the natural outcome of industrialization is a booming economy which in turn could offer better health to populations worldwide. On the contrary, the cost of industrialization is heavy, resulting in a gush of green house emissions that can potentially trigger dramatic environmental changes. These changes have the potential to have a negative impact on health.
Recently, the Arctic and Antarctic regions in the world have been witness to an increase in surface temperatures. This has resulted in the warming of the permafrost and melting of sea ice. A recent study undertaken to study the effects of global warming on climatic zones with the help of global climate models has forecast the complete disappearance of tropical highlands and areas near the poles in the next century. Such models portend that 39% of the land on the earth is likely to experience completely new climates by 2100. This is thought to have a negative impact on the ecosystem.
The most severely affected parts is predicted to be the thickly populated regions in the world, for instance the South Eastern parts of United States, South Eastern Asia and parts of Africa. The areas famous for its biodiversity like the Amazonian rainforest, the mountain ranges of Africa and South America are also likely to face striking ecological shifts propelled by climatic changes.
The risks to health are innumerable with world population witnessing heat waves, wild fires, floods and unprecedented swings in the pattern of infectious diseases. According to the WHO, 25% of the world’s disease is due to contamination of air, food, water and soil caused by dramatic changes in climate.
For instance global warming can make tropical regions warmer. This could potentially steer the animal life and vegetation northwards, spawning the growth of vector-borne diseases in otherwise unheard of regions. This could endanger the health of about 70 million people, who may end up living in malaria-prone areas.
Heat connected deaths, infectious diseases, pollution-related diseases and malnutrition is predicted to witness an upward trend due to climatic changes. Climatic shifts may also have a negative effect on world food supplies as they are crucially dependent on the nature of soil, climate and water. It is becoming increasingly evident that even a few degrees of alteration in temperature can create a rippling effect. The 2004 heat wave in Europe, that claimed as many as 30,000 lives, offers just a peek into the magnitude of destruction unleashed by the effects of climatic changes on human health.

Global warming effecting India :

In India, weather-related natural disasters already caused annual chaos.

In year 2000, whole regions of West Bengal disappeared under water - rescue workers had to use boats to give emergency help to more than 16 million affected people.
These were the worst floods for more than 20 years. Several factors were blamed - from silted riverbeds to mismanagement of resources. But could global warming also have played a part?

"Global warming is going to make other small local environmental issues... seem like peanuts, because it is the big one which is going to come and completely change the face of the Earth.

Take one more instance ,THE evolving weather in the State of Kerala, marked by sudden drenchers interspersed with long dry spells in March 2005, is the best available indicator yet of the lengthening shadow of global warming creeping into our own backyard.

Among the most severe consequences of global warming are: a faster rise in sea level, more heat waves and droughts, resulting in more and more conflicts for water resources; more extreme weather events producing floods and property destruction; and a greater potential for heat-related illnesses and deaths as well as the wider spread of infectious diseases carried by insects and rodents into areas previously free from them.

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