CONTENTS
HIGHLIGHTS
Population Reports is published by the Population Information Program, Center for Communication Programs, The Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, 111 Market Place, Suite 310, Baltimore, Maryland 21202-4012, USA
Fall 2000
Series M, Number 15 |
Water PollutionGlobally, 2.3 billion people suffer from diseases linked to water. Providing safe drinking water and adequate sanitation would have major health benefits. Some benefits include an estimated 2.1 million fewer deaths from diarrheal diseases, 150 million fewer cases of schistosomiasis, and 75 million fewer cases of trachoma (63, 261). Water-borne diseases, also known as "dirty water" diseases, result from using water contaminated by human, animal, or chemical wastes. These diseases cause an estimated 12 million deaths a year, 5 million of them from diarrheal diseases. Most of the victims are children in developing countries (46, 222, 227). In many places both surface and ground waters are fouled with industrial, agricultural, and municipal wastes. According to the World Commission on Water for the 21st Century, more than half of the world's major rivers are so depleted and polluted that they endanger human health and poison surrounding ecosystems (117). In many large cities in the developing world the drinking water supply is contaminated. Only half of Southeast Asia's 550 million people have access to safe drinking water (237).
Pollution from Heavy MetalsIllnesses traced to heavy metals date back to ancient Rome, where lead pots, pipes, and smelters were held responsible for loss of intelligence among children and for brain damage and abnormal behavior among adults (181). Heavy metals released into the environment today come from uncontrolled emissions by metal smelters and other industrial activities, unsafe disposal of industrial wastes, and lead in water pipes, paint, and gasoline. The heavy metals most dangerous to health include lead, mercury, cadmium, arsenic, copper, zinc, and chromium. Such metals are found naturally in the soil in trace amounts, which pose few problems. When concentrated in particular areas, however, they present a serious danger. Arsenic and cadmium, for instance, can cause cancer. Mercury can cause mutations and genetic damage, while copper, lead, and mercury can cause brain and bone damage (262). Lead additives in gasoline cause widespread health problems in some countries. In Thailand, for example, a 1990 study found that some 70,000 children in Bangkok risked losing four or more points of IQ (Intelligence Quotient, based on standardized tests) because they were heavily exposed to lead emissions from motor vehicles. In Latin America some 15 million children under the age of two are at risk of ill health from lead pollution (227). In the US leaded gasoline began to be phased out after the passage of the Clean Air Act in 1970. It was not until the mid-1980s, however, that the European Community followed suit. Elsewhere, leaded gasoline continues to be used extensively (181, 227). |