
Dr N Munal Meitei
Healthy citizens are the greatest assets any country can have –Winston Churchill.
Health is wealth. The better natural environment is for a healthy life. But the health of mother earth and living beings are equally important. World Health Day is celebrated on 7 April every year to mark WHO's founding since 1950. The theme for this year is “Healthy Beginnings, Hopeful Futures”. This theme focuses on enhancing the health and survival of mothers and newborns with the goal of increasing awareness of avoidable maternal and infant deaths.
Health depends on quality food, safe drinking water and adequate shelter. All these essential things are provided by the natural environment. This relationship is indispensable by the fact that our surroundings, including physical, chemical, biological, social and psychological factors, directly impact the human health for the present and future.
Pollution is taking away our right to breathe clean air and it is claiming a life every 5 second. Exposure to environmental hazards like pollution, toxic chemicals and biological agents can negatively impact human health, leading to various diseases and health problems. Unmanaged water triggers epidemics and numerous diseases. Natural disasters like storms, hurricanes and floods kill people.
By disrupting the delicate ecological balance that regulates air, water and nutrient cycles, we risk the entire food chain and human health. Agriculture pesticides that enhance food production have affected both the farm workers and all of us who consume it. Modern medicine promised to solve many health problems but induce numerous side-effects and resistant strains by changing their behavior.
Every breath we take, every sip of water we drink, connects us to the natural world. A clean environment is essential for human health and well-being. However, the interactions between the health and environment are highly complex and difficult to assess. The best-known health impacts are attributed to climate change, unsafe water and sanitation, vector-borne diseases, ambient air & indoor pollution, toxic hazards, loss of biodiver- sity, land degradation and environmental challenges. Depletion of ozone layer also impacts on global climate and human health, increasing the amount of UV radiation reaching the Earth.
Simply for preparing a meal, 4.3 million people mainly women and children die every year. Unsafe water or insufficient hygiene result in 3.5 million deaths worldwide, representing 25% of the deaths of children below 14 years. WHO cautions, 250,000 additional deaths could potentially occur each year between 2030 and 2050 as a result of climate change. Environ- mental degradation is estimated to cause 174–234 times as many premature deaths occur in conflicts annually. Mental health issues also rank among the ten largest non-fatal threats in most countries.
(To be contd)