Given the recent headlines, it probably surprises no one that China has 16 of the world's worst pollution hot-spots
within its
borders, and the negative health effects are beginning to become a major
public health threat. In fact, air pollution contributed to over 1.2 million deaths in China in 2010.
China recently approved 10 anti-pollution measures
in response
to persistent public outcry and environmental damage, but these will
most likely be implemented over the course of years, and public health
risks remain
problematic in the meantime.
Link to the article @ the Atlantic
There has been a dramatic increase in the incidence of asthma in
China over the last 20 years, and estimates that the rates are up by as
much as 40 percent over
the last five years. Shockingly, prevalence in some cities is 11 percent -- and rising.
Asthma, a potentially fatal disease, is the leading cause of
hospitalization among children and carries a significant burden to
families and communities in
China. Children with asthma have increased rates of school
absenteeism, and higher medical costs can be a major cause of stress for
families.
Dr. Qian Qian Sun, a pediatrician working at Shandong's Binzhou
Medical University Hospital, said in an interview that if her patient's
asthma attacks are
linked with air pollution, they often try to move to an area away
from factories. Other families may take more extreme measures, such as
this one reported
in China Weekly
about a young mother who moved their son to three
different cities before sending him to London to control his asthma.
The mother, well educated and resourceful, found leaving China to be
the only remedy
for her son's ailment.
The article set China's social media abuzz, and Internet users
lamented the sorry state of China's air quality, but few people showed
understanding of the
signs and symptoms of asthma, which is sorely lacking in China,
according to a recent study surveying 29 cities in China.
Most exposure to air pollution occurs indoors, and complete
avoidance is challenging if not impossible. "The link between motor
vehicle emissions and
asthma is fairly strong", says Dr. Charles Weschler, Adjunct
Professor at the Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences
Institute at Rutgers
University and visiting Professor at Tsinghua University in Beijing.
"Most of the exposure to motor vehicle emissions actually occurs
indoors, since this
is where Chinese urban residents spend most of their time (and
outdoor-to-indoor transport of motor vehicle emissions is significant).
Other indoor
pollutants, of both outdoor and indoor origin, are anticipated to
contribute to asthma attacks."
Sometimes leaving high pollution areas completely may be the only
way to limit the risks of an asthma attack. Professor Weschler is aware
of numerous U.S.
researchers who have had to stop going to China due to attacks.
While some families and foreign researchers have the resources and
information needed in
order to send their child abroad and stay away from high pollution
areas, the vast majority of families in Chinese cities do not have this
ability.
"On days with high concentration of pollutants, limit activity
outside and try to avoid activities that result in deep breathing,"
Professor Weschler
recommends. "Try to work and sleep in indoor environments that have
filtered pollutants from indoor air. Keep windows closed on high
pollution days to
limit the outdoor-to-indoor transport of outdoor pollutants. Avoid
the indoor use of cleaning products and so called "air fresheners" that
emit organic
chemicals. Avoid activities that results in chemicals being emitted
into indoor air (e.g., painting, floor polishing). Do not light candles,
incense or
mosquito coils. Use an exhaust fan/hood while cooking. No indoor
smoking."
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