
| WIT's World Ecology Report - Vol. 08, No. 2 - Critical Issues in Health and the Environment (WIT, 1996, 16 pages) |
Bernard D. Goldstein,
MD
Director
Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences
Institute
Piscataway, New Jersey, USA
The relationship between human health and the environment is a complex one. While disregard for the environment can adversely effect human health, societies rife with poverty and diseases have little incentive to deal with long-term environmental issues; they have to focus on day-to-day survival. However, example after example shows us that failure to protect the environment imperils human health, both today and tomorrow.
Although the effects of air pollution on our health are now well recognized, it is not always clear to what extent an environmental pollutant is responsible for disease. In some cases, it may act as a catalyst, activating genetic factors that by themselves do not cause disease. Environmental insults may also indirectly endanger human health; for example, deforestation can create an area of erosion that allows devastating flooding, as in the
Bay of Bengal in 1991. Efforts toward sustainable economic development that fail to consider the complex, essential relationship between human health and the environment are doomed to failure.
Populations Affected by Various Infectious Diseases, 1993
|
Disease |
Deaths |
Incidence 1 |
|
Acute Respiratory Infections |
4.1 million |
248 million |
|
Diarrheal Diseases |
3.0 million |
1.8 billion |
|
Tuberculosis |
2.7 million |
8.8 million |
|
Malaria |
2.0 million |
300-500 million (prevalence 2) |
|
Measles |
1.2 million |
45 million |
|
Hepatitis B |
1.0 million |
2.2 million |
|
HIV/AIDS |
700,000 |
2-3 million |
|
Whopping Cough (pertussis) |
360,000 |
4.3 million |
|
Bacterial Meningitis |
210,000 |
1.2 million (prevalence 2) |
|
Schistosomiasis |
200,000 |
200 million (prevalence 2) |
|
Leishmaniasis |
197,000 |
7.2 million |
|
Yellow Fever |
30,000 |
200,000 |
|
Dengue/DHF |
23,000 |
560,000 |
|
Japanese Encephalitis |
11,000 |
40,000 |
|
Cholera |
6,800 |
380,000 |
|
Polio |
5,500 |
110,000 |
1
Number of new cases of a particular
disease reported during a certain period of time.
2 Number of
cases of a particular disease reported during a certain period of time.
SOURCES: Report of the Director-General, The World Health Report 1995: Bridging the Gaps (Geneva: World Health Organization, 1995); malaria data from "World Malaria Situation in 1992, Part I: Middle South Asia, Eastern Asia and Oceania," Weekly Epidemiological Record, October 21, 1994: HIV/AIDS incidence data from Aaron Sachs, "HIV/AIDS Cases Rising Steadily," in Lester R. Brown, Hat Kane, and David Malin Roodman, Vital Signs 1994 (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1994).