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Children's environmental health

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Environmental risks

Risks illustration

Children are more vulnerable than adults to environmental risks because of a number of factors:

  • Children are constantly growing. They breathe more air, consume more food, and drink more water than adults do, in proportion to their weight.
  • Children's central nervous, immune, reproductive, and digestive systems are still developing. At certain early stages of development, exposure to environmental toxicants can lead to irreversible damage.
  • Children behave differently from adults and have different patterns of exposure. Young children crawl on the ground where they can be exposed to dust and chemicals that accumulate on floors and soils.
  • Children have little control over their environment. Unlike adults, they may be both unaware of risks and unable to make choices to protect their health.

Children's health problems resulting from exposure to biologically contaminated water, poor sanitation, indoor smoke, rampant disease vectors such as mosquitoes, inadequate food supply, and unsafe use of chemicals and waste disposal, rank among the highest environmental burden of disease worldwide. Significant progress in reducing the environmental burden of disease on a global scale can only be achieved through focusing on the key risk factors, through a holistic approach. Comprehensive comparative risk assessment suggests a cluster of eight environmental issues, many of which may concur in the places where children dwell, play and learn. These issues are:

- Hazardous child labour
- Lack of physical activity
- Malnutrition
- The built environment
- HIV/AIDS
- Disasters and conflicts - Air pollution
- Lack of water and inadequate sanitation
- Disease vectors
- Chemical hazards
- Accidents and injuries
- Global environmental change
- Radiation
- Emerging issues

Children can also be affected by other environmental risks such as:


NEWS

Training modules available
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International CEHI Workshop: 10-11 April 2008
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The Health and Environment Lexicon
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CEH Profile Argentina
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CEHI Newsletter
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The environment and health for children and their mothers
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Posters and maps
adapted from Inheriting the World: The Atlas of Children's Health and the Environment
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Data review from international surveys
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EVENTS

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Statistics
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Publications
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Fact sheets
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Indicators to improve children's environmental health
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LINKS

Healthy Environments for Children Alliance
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Child and Adolescent Health and Development
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Family and Community Health
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WHO Global Database on Child Growth and Malnutrition
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School Health and Youth Health Promotion
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Other links
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