Cancer rates are alarmingly increasing in the Kuttanad region of Kerala, India. Kuttanad has a population of over 1.8 million people and is a major rice producing region, where large amounts of chemicals like fertilizers and pesticides are used annually. Studies have found cancer prevalence rates in Kuttanad to be higher than other regions, and linked this to water pollution from agricultural chemicals as over 50% of the local population relies on contaminated canals and lakes for drinking water. High levels of pesticides have also been detected in fish and shrimp caught from the area. Waterborne diseases are also increasing, with over 5,000 deaths from diarrheal diseases in the last 10 years, as development has
Cancer rates are alarmingly increasing in the Kuttanad region of Kerala, India. Kuttanad has a population of over 1.8 million people and is a major rice producing region, where large amounts of chemicals like fertilizers and pesticides are used annually. Studies have found cancer prevalence rates in Kuttanad to be higher than other regions, and linked this to water pollution from agricultural chemicals as over 50% of the local population relies on contaminated canals and lakes for drinking water. High levels of pesticides have also been detected in fish and shrimp caught from the area. Waterborne diseases are also increasing, with over 5,000 deaths from diarrheal diseases in the last 10 years, as development has
Cancer rates are alarmingly increasing in the Kuttanad region of Kerala, India. Kuttanad has a population of over 1.8 million people and is a major rice producing region, where large amounts of chemicals like fertilizers and pesticides are used annually. Studies have found cancer prevalence rates in Kuttanad to be higher than other regions, and linked this to water pollution from agricultural chemicals as over 50% of the local population relies on contaminated canals and lakes for drinking water. High levels of pesticides have also been detected in fish and shrimp caught from the area. Waterborne diseases are also increasing, with over 5,000 deaths from diarrheal diseases in the last 10 years, as development has
Cancer rates are alarmingly increasing in the Kuttanad region of Kerala, India. Kuttanad has a population of over 1.8 million people and is a major rice producing region, where large amounts of chemicals like fertilizers and pesticides are used annually. Studies have found cancer prevalence rates in Kuttanad to be higher than other regions, and linked this to water pollution from agricultural chemicals as over 50% of the local population relies on contaminated canals and lakes for drinking water. High levels of pesticides have also been detected in fish and shrimp caught from the area. Waterborne diseases are also increasing, with over 5,000 deaths from diarrheal diseases in the last 10 years, as development has
Cancer, the killer disease, is now spreading fast into Kuttanad region, the primary water-logged rice bowl of central Kerala. This densely populated region, comprising parts of Kottayam and Alappuzha Districts, is today home to over 1.8 million people. Kuttanad is most suitable for rice cultivation, the major crop of the land as well as coconuts,, trees of which stand on the mainland walkway sides and all around the lakeshores. Here, roughly 15,000 tonnes of chemical fertilizers, 500 tonnes of insecticides and 50 tonnes of fungicides are consumed annually. Doctors confirm that 499 patients, mostly from the Kuttanad belt, underwent treatment at the radiotherapy department of the Alappuzha Medical College Hospital between January and May 2013, as against 355 during the same period the previous year and 300 the year before that. Preliminary investigations by the radiology department of the hospital and voluntary organizations point to cancers of the
intestines, lips, blood, urinary bladder and
skin. A cancer survey in the Kainakary Panchayat of water-logged Kuttanad, conducted in the wake of media reports on an increased prevalence of the disease in the region, has indicated continuing nonavailability of pure drinking water and lack of measures to control lifestyle diseases, apart from confirming an above average prevalence of cancer. The survey, covering 8,091 people from 1,809 houses in the seven wards of Kainakary Panchayat, found that 91 deaths, making up for 27 per cent of the total 334 deaths in the seven wards last year, resulted from cancer. Dividing the cases into probable and confirmed cases, the survey found that the prevalence of selfreported cancer cases in the seven panchayat wards was 4.5 cases per 1,000 persons for confirmed cases. The overall prevalence, including both probable and confirmed, stood at 6.3 per 1,000 persons. A three-year Indo-Dutch Study has established that the use of fertilizers and
pesticides were 50-75 percent more in
Kuttanad than in other regions.
lakes for their drinking water.
The study also points out that over 50
per cent of chemicals used in Kuttanad were highly toxic and that the doses of chemicals used to protect crops here was much higher than that recommended by the Kerala Agricultural University. In addition, organic tissue sample of fish and shrimp showed levels of pesticide to be 10 times higher than the admissible toxic levels.
During summer months when there
was no flow into Kuttanad from the rivers emptying into the basin the region enjoyed the cleansing impact of the ebb and flow of the seas tidal action. The salinity in the water also helped check the proliferation of water weeds. Today the stagnant cesspools of the region, which are infested with thick weed growth, provide the ideal breeding ground for mosquitoes.
The Kerala Pollution Control Board
(KPCB), which was associated in a detailed study of the regions various problems under a three-year Indo-Dutch programme, the Kuttanad water balance study project, reports that some 25,000 tons of fertiliser and 500 tons of highly toxic pesticides are used in the 55,000 hectares of Kuttanad paddy fields annually. A considerable portion of this enters the water bodies when the water drains from the fields. According to the study referred to above, the use of fertilizers and pesticides was 50 to 75 per cent more in Kuttanad than in other regions.
The recent outbreak is reminiscent of
various previous ones, highlighting the immediate need for ameliorative measures. In 1991, a devastating fish disease ulcerative syndrome - had wiped out a large number of fish in Kuttanad. A series of researches conducted in its wake have pointed out that pesticide pollution was the predisposing factor for the disease. Following that, ducks too died in large numbers because of some mysterious disease. Most of the diseases were in one way or another related to the environment and its degradation.
Studies by the KPCB have revealed
the presence of DDT and its derivatives, DDE and DDD in water and soil sediments. Some of these chemicals are well-known carcinogens. More than 40 per cent of the population of the area or nearly five lakh people depend on polluted canals, rivers and
In the Alappuzha Municipal area too,
a survey early last year identified 1,500 possible cancer cases. A cancer survey in the Kainakary Panchayat of the waterlogged Kuttanad, conducted in the wake of media reports on an increased prevalence of the disease in the region, has indicated
continued non-availability of pure drinking
water and lack of measures to control lifestyle diseases, apart from confirming an above average prevalence of cancer. A report on the survey, conducted by the Department of Community Medicine of the Alappuzha Medical College, the Regional Prevention of Epidemic and Infectious Diseases Cell and the State Disease Control and Monitoring Cell, covering 8,091 people from 1,809 houses in the seven wards of Kainakary Panchayat, found that 91 deaths, making up for 27 per cent of the total 334 deaths in the seven wards from July 2004 to July 2009, were due to cancer. Dividing the cases into probable and confirmed cases, the survey found that prevalence of self-reported cancer cases in the seven wards was 4.5 cases per 1,000 persons for confirmed cases. Kuttanad is a waterlogged stretch of about 110,000 hectares and 50,000 hectares of the region are even 60-220 centimeters below sea level. For the better part of the year, most of the land is submerged in water. It has the distinction of being one of the few areas in the world where farming is carried out below sea level. Solid waste from medical colleges at Alappuzha and Kottayam, sewage from the municipalities of Kottayam, Thiruvalla,
Changanassery and Alappuzha, the oil and
faecal wastes from about 1200 house boats which ply between Alappuzha and Kumarakam- all find a dumping place in the Vembanad Lake. According to surveys by the Centre for Water Resources Development and Management Kozhikode, more than 80 per cent of the people in Kuttanad rely on the contaminated canal water for their daily water requirements. About 40 per cent of this number also use the water without boiling it first. Developmental interventions have, in fact, only worked to hurt Kuttanadus fragile ecosystem. Aquatic weeds have also grown to epidemic proportions. According to Kerala State Pollution Control Board statistics, the coliform bacteria count in 100 millilitres of water in the Pampa river at Sabarimala is 200,000. When the river water reaches Edathua in Kuttanadu, the count will have risen to 48,700. It is no wonder then, that outbreaks of epidemics like Rat Fever and Diarrhoea have seen an alarming increase. Statistics at the Alappuzha Medical College show an increase in Filariasis, Schistosomiasis, Typhoid, Jaundice, Intestinal Cancer, Gastroenteritis and Cholera. Over the past 10 years, diarrhoeal diseases resulting from inadequate water and sanitation have killed over 5000 in Kuttanad.
The Alleppey Medical College, records
for the past five years reveal that of the total patients admitted with waterborne diseases, more than 70 per cent were from Champakulam, Nedumudy, Momkonbu, Kainakary, Pallathruthy all in Kuttanad region. The main reason for such serious waterborne diseases is contamination of water in the rivers, canals and Vembanad Lake. Contamination of water in Kuttanad has acquired serious dimensions in recent years. Unscientific constructions such as roads, bridges etc across the rivers and canals and arresting the water flow in the name of development have resulted in the creation of large pools of stagnant and contaminated water that act as breeding ground for bacteria and mosquitoes. The Vembanad Kol Wetlands has been identified as the Ramsar Site at the international convention on wetlands organized by the UNESCO in the Iranian city of Ramsar in 1981. Vembanad lake along with the adjacent wetland over the eastern and southern sides forms Kuttanad, the rice
bowl of Kerala, and the largest wetland
system in the western coast of India. During the Sabarimala Temple pilgrimage season four million people cross the Pamba river to reach the hill shrine and the river turns into a cesspool of human waste, raw sewage and garbage. The pilgrims defecate on the river banks and in the vicinity for miles together, faecal matter gets washed into the river water. Resultantly, Epidemics like Rat fever and Diarrhoea have seen an alarming increase. Over the past 10 years, diarrhoeal diseases resulting from inadequate water and sanitation have killed over 5,000 in Kuttanad.