Chapter 1
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
By: Gutama H.
May, 2022
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Learning Objectives
Define basic terms
Historical background of Environmental health
Explain the basic relationship between environment
and health
Explain why Environmental health matter?
Explain determinants of health
Explain the scope of environmental health
Explain the role of environmental health
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Definitions of terms
What is health???
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Definition: ‘Health …’
• Is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being
and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity’(WHO,
1948)
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Definition: ‘Environment’
• Literary environment means the surrounding external
conditions influencing development or growth of people,
animal or plants; living or working conditions etc.
• is the sum of all external conditions and influences that
affect the life and development of an organism, human
behavior or society.
• It can be divided into physical, biological, social, cultural
any or all of which can influence health status in
populations.’ (WHO, 1995)
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Introduction…
The environment consists of four segments
1. Atmosphere: - implies the protective blanket of gases,
surrounding the earth
o It absorbs
most of the cosmic rays from outer space and
a major portion of the electromagnetic radiation from the sun and
transmits only here visible ultraviolet, and radio waves
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Introduction…
2. Hydrosphere: comprises all types of water resources oceans,
seas, lakes, rivers, streams, reservoir, polar icecaps, glaciers, and
ground water
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Definition: ‘Environmental Health’
• It
also, refers to the theory and practice of assessing,
correcting, controlling, and preventing those factors in
the environment that can potentially affect the health of
present and future generations’ (WHO, 1993a)
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Definition: ‘Sanitation’
Public Health
Occupational Health
Family Health
Personal Health
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Contamination:
is the presence of an infection agent on a body surface; also
on/in clothes, bedding, toys, surgical instruments or
dressings, including water and food
Pollution:
the undesirable change in the physical, chemical, or
biological characteristics of air, land and water that may or
will harmfully affect human life or that of other desirable
species, industrial processes, living conditions, and cultural
assets: or that may or will waste or deteriorate raw material
resources
Background level/concentration 11
Definition: ‘Health Effect’
• Is the specific damage to health that an environmental
hazard can cause to an individual person
• Often the same hazard can cause a range of different
effects of different severity.’ (Yassi et al., 2001)
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Historical background of Environmental health
Reading assignment
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Human-environment interaction outcomes
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Human-environment interaction outcomes
Human ecology is the study of the
interactions between humans
With one another
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Human-environment interaction outcomes...
• liquid
i
&E
system:
con
• solid
- received and
om
• gaseous assimilated
ic
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Human-environment interaction outcomes...
The system has been ever active by :
Dispersing gaseous wastes
Diluting animal wastes washed into streams or rivers
Converting organic wastes into humus to support the future
population
ASSIMILATIVE CAPACITY???
☞ This means that:
for every natural act of pollution or/and
for every incident that eroded the quality of the immediate
or local environment
there were a natural mechanisms that restored the
quality
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Human-environment interaction outcomes...
However,
In recent years, this natural
mechanism has begun to show
sign of stress, primarily because
of man’s unfriendly interaction
with the environment
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Does Environmental health Matters?
why?
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Introduction…
The issue of environmental health is now a global matter under
the guidance of the UN through the WHO
Universal human rights:
“All people have the right to a standard of living adequate for
health and well being of themselves and their family, including
food, clothing, housing, healthcare, and the necessary social
services”
The significance of hygiene and environmental health is
recognized in the UNs’ MDGs and SDGs
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Introduction…
The Ethiopian National Health policy considers that hygiene and
environmental health is one of the cornerstones of the strategy
for the promotion of health and wellbeing
The Ethiopian Constitution states that
‘All persons have the right to a clean and healthy
environment’ (Article 44/1).
All Ethiopians should have ‘access to clean water, housing
and food’ (Article 90/1).
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I. Lack of access to clean water and sanitation
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention;
• An estimated 780 million people worldwide don’t have access
to safe drinking water, and a jaw-dropping 2.5 billion (or
roughly a third of Earth’s population) lack adequate sanitation
services like clean bathrooms
• The impact of this is staggering
• An estimated 2,200 children die every day worldwide of
diarrheal diseases linked to improper water and sanitation
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II. Indoor air pollution
• Majority of the population especially in the continents of
Africa, Asia, Latina America use biomass & fossil fuels like
wood, coal… in an open air or poorly constructed oven…
emission & exposure to smoke high in particulate matter, &
gasses like CO, SO2, NO2
• Women, children & z elderly are venerable population
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III. Vector born diseases
• Malaria
• Dengue and dengue hemorrhagic fever
• Filariasis
• Yellow fever (viral)
• Human African trypanosomiasis
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IV. Environmental health and poverty
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V. Other Global problems
• Ozone depletion has raised the risk of skin cancer;
• Loss of biodiversity has raised the need of basified in many
developing countries;
• Global climate change has become a concern in the world:
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Physical/environmental factors
Individual behaviors
Biological factors
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Physical /Environmental factors
i. Climate
Tropical countries
• Warm, humid temperature, prevalence of rain
• Parasitic and infectious diseases are leading community
health problems
Temperate climate
• Fewer parasitic andinfectious disease and a more than
adequate food supply, chronic non-communicable
diseases are common problems
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ii. Production and use of non-renewable natural resource
• Example fossil
fuels
• Non- renewable because it takes billions of years to
produce them when compared with the rate of
consumption
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One of the five deadly effects of global worming is the spread
of diseases
Changes in temperature will affect vector development,
reproduction, behavior and survival rates
Temperature can also affect pathogen development
within vectors
Precipitation can influence the availability of breeding
sites, and
Climatic variables can affect the distribution and
abundance of their vertebrate host species
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iii. Population Growth
• As population and demand for natural resources continue
to grow, environmental limits will become increasingly
apparent
• As we humans exploit nature to meet present needs, we
are destroying resources needed for the future
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Social and cultural factors
Arise from the interaction of individuals or groups within
the community
Prejudice of one specific ethnic group against the other
can result in acts of violence and crime (our country)
Some limit the type of
medical treatment their
members may receive (contraceptive)
Some don’t permit immunization, HIV/AIDS
medications, Some never donate blood to the needy
ones, etc.
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i. Social norms
Example
• Alcohol consumption of college students; the
normal expectation seems to be fun.
• Smoking
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Individual behavior
Examples
• If each occupant wear a safety belt, …
• If an individual is immunized against a certain disease ,
the lower the disease will be spread and the fewer
people will be exposed
• Personalchoices, social and physical environment can
shape individuals behavior
Biological factors
• Individuals genetic makeup
• Family history which may suggest risk for a disease (ex.
DM, Cancer….)
• Physical and mental health problems acquired during life
Aging (stroke) 36
SCOPE OF
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
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Scope of environmental…
Environmental health is the broadest scope of health problem
definition
It is a population based science that can be scaled to study
individual within populations
Problem definition and potential resolution is possible through
the implementation of a systematic approach
Determine the nature and source of hazards
Determine the exposure pathway
The vulnerable/susceptible group
Measure the effects
Apply controls measures at each steps if possible
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Scope of environmental…
• Waste management: (Solid, Human & liquid waste): Proper
excreta disposal & liquid waste management, Proper
application of storage, collection, disposal: Waste recycling and
generation analysis
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• Foodhygiene: Food safety and wholesomeness in its
production, storage, preparation, distribution, sale, until
consumption
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• Occupational health /hygiene: Occupational health
service, sanitation, safety in working settings
• Hygiene education
• Urban and regional planning
• Environmental health aspects of air, sea or land transport
• Public recreation and tourism, in particular the
environmental health aspects of public beaches
swimming-pools, camping, disasters and migrations of
population
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The role of environmental health in public
health
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Chain of Disease Transmission
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For the development of the infectious process, six factors are
essential:
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Major determining factors in the chain diseases
transmision
Host
Enviro
Agent
nment
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Agent
• Sterilization (the process of killing all microorganisms
including spores)
• Disinfection (the application of chemicals to materials,
which come in to contact with or are ingested by
humans, for the purpose of killing pathogenic
microorganisms)
Host
• Personal hygiene
• Immunization
• Nutrition
• Isolation
Environment
• Environmental manipulation
• Environmental sanitation
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Role…
Therefore, to stop the spread of a communicable disease,
attacking the agent,
protectingthe host or
changing the environment can break the chain
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