Healthy Ecological Architecture

Research in to the rethinking the industrial city centers of the 21st century from a holistic environmental, ecologicial, toxicological, economic, sociological, political & spiritual perspective. I personally am approaching the problem from an ecological as well as a toxicological - public health and occupational health perspective.

Friday, October 07, 2005

Climate Change and Pollution are Killing Millions, Says Study

Climate Change and Pollution are Killing Millions, Says Study
: "Climate Change and Pollution are Killing Millions, Says Study

Poor sanitation to blame, says World Bank report

Economic growth stalled by environmental factors


by John Vidal


Almost a fifth of all ill health in poor countries and millions of deaths can be attributed to environmental factors, including climate change and pollution, according to a report from the World Bank.


Unsafe water, poor sanitation and hygiene as well as indoor and outdoor air pollution are all said to be killing people and preventing economic development. In addition, says the bank, increasing soil pollution, pesticides, hazardous waste and chemicals in food are significantly affecting health and economies.


More controversially, the report, released yesterday in New York, links cancers to environmental conditions and says global warming has a major impact on health. 'For almost all forms of cancer, the risk of contracting this disease can be reduced if physical environments are safe for human habitation and food items are safe for consumption,' says the report.


It also cites the spread of malaria and dengue fever as climate change intensifies. Global warming, says the report, is leading to lower yields of some crops and the salination of coastal areas.
'In 2000 more than 150,000 premature deaths were attributed to various climate change impacts, according to the World Health Organisation,' it says.
While tobacco, alcohol and unsafe sex are still the most likely threats to health in developing countries, rapid urbanisation and the spread of slum conditions are now major hazards, says the report.
"Some 1.1 billion people lack access to safe water and 2.6 billion lack access to safe sanitation. [This leads to] about 4 billion cases of diarrhoea a year, which cause 1.8 million deaths a year, mostly among children under five," it says.


Sanitation, says the bank, which is committed to increasing spending on the environment, is very much "a forgotten problem", with spending on improvements estimated at just $1bn in 2000 - less than 10% of that spent on water.


Millions of people who have moved to cities to find work have swapped indoor for outdoor air pollution, suggests the report. Urban air pollution is estimated to cause about 800,000 premature deaths, it says, approaching the number of people affected by indoor air pollution from wood fires in poorly ventilated homes in rural areas.


According to the report, which uses WHO statistics, high concentrations of minute particles released by smoky fires are now responsible for over 1.6 million deaths a year. Acute respiratory infection, largely caused by indoor air pollution, it says, was responsible for 36% of all registered infant deaths in Guatemala between 1997 and 2000.


The report also says manmade chemicals such as pesticides have an increasing impact on the health of poor people.


A survey of child labour in several developing countries, it says, found more than 60% of all working children were exposed to hazardous conditions, and more than 25% of these hazards were due to exposure to chemicals


"Without a healthy, productive labour force, we will not have the economic growth that is necessary to ensure a pathway out of poverty. Poor people are the first to suffer from a polluted environment," said Warren Evans, director of the bank's environment department.


ยท The scale of the Boxing Day tsunami led to complete chaos and "misguided goodwill" among the hundreds of humanitarian groups who rushed to Asia to help affected communities, according to a report commissioned by the International Red Cross. More than 400 local, national and international groups went to India, 100 to Sri Lanka and many more to other countries. But the eagerness to help led to some sending or distributing inappropriate aid, others competing to spend vast sums of donated cash, and many duplicating each other's efforts."

US Poverty: Chronic Ill, Little Hope for Cure

US Poverty: Chronic Ill, Little Hope for Cure: "SCENES SHOCKED WORLD, SHAMED AMERICANS
The images shocked the world, shamed many Americans and prompted comparisons with conditions in developing countries from Somalia and Angola to Bangladesh. The pictures from New Orleans showed poor black people begging for help. Most of the rescuers, when they finally arrived, were white.
The percentage of black Americans living in poverty is 24.7, almost twice as high as the overall rate for all races.
In predominantly black New Orleans, that disparity translated into those with cars and money, almost all white, fleeing the flood while more than 100,000 car-less blacks were trapped in the flooded city.
Some commentators wondered whether the crisis showed that political segregation, America's version of apartheid which formally ended with the 1964 Civil Rights Act, had merely been replaced by economic segregation. Poor black Americans in one part of a city, affluent whites in the other.
A host of other American cities have such divides, including Newark, Philadelphia, Detroit, Atlanta, Baltimore, St. Louis, Oakland, Miami and the U.S. capital itself. It is a 10-minute drive from the White House to the heart of Anacostia, the city's poorest neighborhood, but they could be in different worlds.
But the black-equals-poor scenes from New Orleans do not portray the full picture. There are three times as many poor whites as blacks in the United States and the poverty rate for whites has risen faster than that for blacks and Hispanics."

Monday, October 03, 2005

This Illiterate Brazilian's Home Speaks Volumes - Yahoo! News

This Illiterate Brazilian's Home Speaks Volumes - Yahoo! News: "The Brazilian government has launched a series of initiatives to improve the situation, including a reduction in taxes on books, a 'Hungry for Books' reading drive and a campaign to establish public libraries in all towns and cities.
Leite couldn't wait.
'Those of us who grew up here, we know what the needs of the community are,' he said. 'I stopped and thought, 'Wait a minute. There's not a single library. The schools have libraries, but there's no public library.' So I said, 'Let's make this dream come true.' '
When he asked members of his small bicycling group to help him collect used books, 'they all thought I was a little crazy,' he said.
But they humored him, and the nameless cycling club got a moniker: 'The Madmen of Sao Goncalo.' Or so they seemed at first to the neighbors whose doors they knocked on.
'Some people thought, 'You must be joking. Here in this community, people ask for clothes, but to ask for books!' ' said Ronaldo Pena, 48, one of the cyclists.
They inaugurated the library on March 20, 2004, with 100 volumes, most of them literary and historical treatises donated by someone Pena knew. Since then, the group has been amassing books at a feverish pace. Many come from rich Brazilians in whose homes they work as cleaners, handymen and the like.
Because everything is by donation, the collection is eclectic and quixotic, but impressive in scope: from Shakespeare to Agatha Christie, Umberto Eco to political theorist Antonio Gramsci, William Faulkner to James Joyce, not to mention textbooks and reference works. There's no Dewey decimal system, or even strict alphabetical order; books are s"

Bicycle sales boom in US amid rising gas prices - Yahoo! News

Bicycle sales boom in US amid rising gas prices - Yahoo! News: "WASHINGTON (AFP) - More bicycles than cars have been sold in the United States over the past 12 months, with rising gas prices prompting commuters to opt for two wheels instead of four.
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Not since the oil crisis of 1973 have bicycles sold in such big numbers, according to Tim Blumenthal, executive director of Bikes Belong, an industry association."

New Bans Show China's Concerns About Tech - Yahoo! News

New Bans Show China's Concerns About Tech - Yahoo! News: "Two new Internet bans may offer insight into the Chinese government's biggest fears. One bars Internet news services from inciting 'illegal' assemblies, marches and demonstrations; the other prohibits activities on behalf of 'illegal' civil groups. "

Attention: testy visitors risk being shot in Florida - Yahoo! News

Attention: testy visitors risk being shot in Florida - Yahoo! News: "MIAMI (AFP) - Welcome to Florida, but avoid arguments or thanks to a new law you run the risk of getting shot, according to an ad campaign launched by a gun-control group.
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The campaign coincides with a state law that enters into effect authorizing gun owners to shoot anyone in a public area who they believe threaten their safety.
The law, supported by the National Rifle Association (NRA), was approved by the state legislature in April. Governor Jeb Bush described it as a 'good, common sense, anti-crime issue' when he signed it into law. His is a brother of US President George W. Bush.
Supporters call it the 'Stand Your Ground' law, while opponents call it the 'Shoot First' law."

Clowns ease anxiety in young patients -study - Yahoo! News

Clowns ease anxiety in young patients -study - Yahoo! News: "CHICAGO (Reuters) - A clown in the operating room may relax anxious children who are about to undergo surgery, but the entertainer has to learn to keep out of the way, Italian researchers said on Monday.
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A study of 40 children between 4 months and 3 years old who were accompanied by at least one parent prior to minor surgery found having a clown present significantly reduced anxiety levels for both child and parent. Three out of five children suffer anxiety before surgery, according to the report published in the journal Paediatrics.
Clowns succeeded in distracting the children until the administration of anaesthesia, but apparently annoyed doctors and nurses."

World toilet summit lifts lid on public hygiene - Yahoo! News

World toilet summit lifts lid on public hygiene - Yahoo! News: "'A lot was achieved, including the finalization of a protocol setting out global standards for the provision and hygiene of public toilets,' Raymond Martin, director of the Irish Toilet Association, told Reuters.
Other highlights of the summit included the launch of a 'Bog Standard Campaign' to push for better toilets in UK schools, and the unveiling of Belfast's first public UriLift toilet, a stainless steel urinal that rises hydraulically out of the ground at night to facilitate male revelers.
In terms of public toilet excellence, it was generally agreed that Singapore was a model for the rest of the world, with the UK somewhere around the middle of the league table."