Public health researchers from the University of Sydney respond to reports air pollution in Delhi has reached toxic levels, prompting concerns from health authorities.
is an Honorary Professor at the University of Sydney and was in India in November for the World Lung Health Conference of the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease.
鈥淚 have witnessed, first-hand, the dreadful air pollution event affecting Delhi at the moment. Air pollution is the greatest environmental threat to human health. There were an estimated 4.9 million deaths globally attributable to air pollution in 2017, 1.24 million of which were in India.
鈥淚t is a global emergency that we need to tackle. It causes illness and death due to heart attacks, strokes, pneumonia, asthma and other lung disease, and, in the longer term, cancer.听
鈥淭he solution requires multi-sectoral approaches involving governments, the private sector and individuals.鈥
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The acute respiratory and eye symptoms that many people will experience are only just the tip of the iceberg.
is a maternal and child health expert at the University of Sydney School of Public Health.
鈥淒elhi and India more broadly are at the crossroads of a major industrial transition where industry without regard for environmental control continues to pollute, at the same time traditional farming practices continue. Combined, this creates exceedingly high air pollution.
鈥淧regnant women and children are also extremely vulnerable to the poor air quality in Delhi.听 The acute respiratory and eye symptoms that many people will experience are only just the tip of the iceberg that will also impact the developing fetus and small children.鈥澨
is an Associate Professor of Environmental Health at the University of Sydney鈥檚 School of Public Health.
鈥淎 major component of the air pollution in the current incident in Delhi is related to crop residue or 鈥渟tubble鈥, burning in the regions surrounding the city.听 Burning is used to clear the fields in preparation for the next seasons planting.听
鈥淭hese extreme episodes of air pollution highlight the magnitude of the health impacts due to air pollution in cities throughout India and in low / middle income countries around the world.听
鈥淗owever, it is important to understand that these cities generally have high levels of air pollution with substantial heath impacts.听
鈥淲hile it is important that policies be put in place to reduce the impacts of smoke from agricultural burning, it is also essential to develop effective strategies to reduce everyday air pollution emissions from the broad range of urban sources such as coal fired power plants, motor vehicles and industry.鈥
is a research fellow with the University of Sydney鈥檚 Rural Clinical School
鈥淯nfortunately, such extreme levels of air pollution are symptomatic of the modern human's demand for energy derived from burning fossil fuels and other carbon-based fuels such as wood and cow dung, two very common sources of energy in India.听
鈥淭he short-term impact on air pollution such as small airborne particles and toxic gases is of substantial public health concern, even at the low levels we find in Australia.
鈥淚n Australia we have much lower levels than in Delhi, but our studies show that there appears to be no safe lower threshold of exposure to small airborne particles and there is likely premature mortality and lost life expectancy in Australia.
鈥淭here are also very worrying long-term impacts of the large-scale environmental and climatic changes听associated听with the modern human's high consumption phase of our evolutionary ecological history, especially the enhanced green-house effect and global heating induced by the emission of green-house gases from environmentally damaging technologies.鈥
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