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Environment and health

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Resumen del documento publicado por la Agencia Europea de Medio Ambiente:

Public concerns, evidence from research and increasing scientific knowledge are all driving widespread discussions on environment and health problems. The issue of environment and health is characterised by multi-causality with different strengths of association. This means that the links between exposures and their health consequences depend on the environmental pollutants and diseases being considered, but are also influenced by factors such as genetic constitution, age, nutrition and lifestyle, and socioeconomic factors such as poverty and level of education.

Air pollution indoors and outdoors are the environmental factors with the greatest impact on health in Europe and are responsible for the largest burden of environment-related disease. Recent estimates indicate that 20 million Europeans suffer from respiratory problems every day. Particulate matter and especially small particles with a diameter less than 2.5 micrometres (PM2.5) are associated with increased mortality, especially from cardiovascular and cardiopulmonary diseases.

Asthma is increasing all over Europe, although there is a significant variation between EU-25 countries. The societal cost of asthma has been estimated at EUR 3 billion/year. Clearly, asthmatic persons, and particularly asthmatic children, are sensitive to air quality and several studies show a strong association between exposure to air pollution and the aggravation of asthma. To what extent air pollution initiates asthma is unclear.

Cancer in European children younger than 15 years of age is in general terms rare but remains one of the most common causes of death in children in industrialised countries. Radon exposure is the bestdocumented environment-related cause of cancer but is localised in geographical areas where radon precursors (uranium) occur naturally in the ground.

A number of chemicals are potentially carcinogenic. Approximately 500 are classified as carcinogens and are legally not allowed to reach the consumer. They may, however, reach the environment via diffuse sources, for instance in accidental cases. Arsenic in drinking water and cadmium from diffuse sources are environmental contaminants of special concern, because of increasing environmental exposure and their suspected carcinogenicity.

Every European citizen is today exposed to electromagnetic fields (EMF) which can be characterised in terms of their frequency and amplitude. Neither experimental studies on animals nor epidemiological studies have come to any conclusive results. On the basis of current scientific knowledge it is not possible to answer ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to the question of whether the use of mobile phones poses an increased risk of cancer.

Mercury and lead at concentrations that are sometimes observed in the environment are well known to have neurodevelopmental effects.

Environmental noise is probably the environmental factor that affects the largest number of Europeans. The main health risks of noise are annoyance, interference with social behaviour and speech communication, sleep disturbance and all its consequences, cardiovascular effects, hormonal responses and poor performance at work or school.

Endocrine disruptors are substances that interfere with hormone-dependent functions in the body such as embryonic development, production of sperm, control of the menstrual cycle, the onset of puberty and cancers in hormone-dependent tissues. Worldwide, a decline in semen quality has been observed over the past 50 years but no clear connection to endocrine disrupters has been established.

Every European citizen has man-made chemical contaminants in his or her body. Bio-monitoring of different populations clearly shows an increased body burden of some persistent and bioaccumulative substances, but concentrations of other substances are decreasing.

The global distribution of ‘new’ metals used in automobile catalytic converters to reduce hydrocarbon pollution is clearly shown in the Arctic. Concentrations of platinum, palladium, and rhodium in ice and snow in Greenland have increased rapidly since the 1970s.

Arctic human populations are at risk due to the long-distance transport of bio-accumulative substances, with the Arctic as an important sink, and the dependence of indigenous populations on traditional diets exposes them unduly to chemicals accumulated in the food chain. Europe and other developed countries have a clear responsibility for the global body burden of chemicals. This raises issues of equity and global responsibility.

Wildlife can serve as a sentinel to give early warnings of the effects of chemicals at natural exposure levels. Examples include predator birds and mammals with high levels of bio-accumulative, persistent and toxic chemicals.

Links between climate change and health are increasingly being identified, for example 35 000 heat-induced deaths in Europe were registered during the 2003 heat wave, mainly due to dehydration, especially of elderly people. There are possible proactive healthcare measures to combat the impact of such events, which particularly affect vulnerable groups, again raising issues of equity.

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