From the Atlantic Wire
Nobody's using those cookstoves that are supposed to save humanity. If
a great idea falls into the laps of millions of households and nobody
uses it, it doesn't count as a great idea, which is exactly what's
happening with the cookstove movement. When studies found that indoor
air pollution from primitive stoves was a leading cause of death in the
world, the developed world reacted with clean cookstoves. What was
supposed to be a simple, cheap, easy way to save lives, however, isn't
working, as a new study has found nobody's using the things. Many aren't
accepting the new stove into their homes and the ones that have are
still using the old problem stoves. "This isn’t to say that indoor air
pollution is not a problem, or that an improved cooking stove cannot be
part of the solution. But rather, we just don’t have enough evidence
that the stoves systematically improve health, particularly under real
world conditions where people do not regularly use the stoves, and if
they do, the use often does not perfectly follow the manufacturer’s
instructions," explains researcher Rema Hanna. This type of thing tends
to happen when science meets reality, though, as we learned from This
American Life, which found a similar problem with mango farmers. [New York Times]
Pollution's making us fat. Environmental problems
meet health problems in this latest finding, which links pollution to
childhood obesity. Children of women exposed to high levels of chemicals
called PAHs during pregnancy were nearly twice as likely to be obese at
age 5, and more than twice as likely to be obese at age 7. "Not only
was their body mass higher, but it was higher due to body fat rather
than bone or muscle mass," explains researcher Andrew G. Rundle. The
findings help explain why inner city obesity is more prevalent than
overall obesity. [Columbia University]
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