Air pollution in India causes 30% premature deaths, leads to cancer and mental diseases: CSE Report
Highlighting major links between environment and health, a
study released here on Monday held lifestyle diseases like obesity, mental health, cancer and heart diseasesto count a
few, as the major killers in India. Revealing the links of air pollution with
mental diseases, a report by Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) stated
that air pollution is responsible for 30 per cent of premature deaths in India
while every third child in Delhi has impaired lungs. “Over 61 per cent of total
deaths in India were attributed to lifestyle or non-communicable diseases
(NCDs). More than 1.73 million new cancer cases likely to be recorded each year
by 2020, air pollution, tobacco, alcohol and diet change are primary triggers,”
said the report “Body Burden” released by CSE.
“Air pollution causes 30 per cent of all premature deaths in
the country; linkages with mental diseases revealed in the study,” the report
added. It further pointed out that every 12th Indian is a diabetic. “India
ranks second in the list of countries with highest diabetes patients,” the
report stated. The report establishes that unless environmental risk factors
are acknowledged and dealt with, India will not be able to curb NCDs. According
to the World Health Organization (WHO), there are four major risk factors for
NCDs — alcohol, tobacco, poor diet intake and lack of physical activity, which
the WHO claims could be dramatically reduced by investing just USD 1-3 per year
per person. Read here howair pollution may lower your sperm quality
The CSE report, however, confronts the WHO estimation,
asserting that much more investment would be required for India. “We believe
the cost is going to be much higher considering that risk factors in India are
many more than the four identified by the global body,” said Sunita Narain,
director general, CSE and member Supreme Court-appointed Environment Pollution Control
Authority (EPCA). Explaining the reasons behind this, Narain said that
the identified risk factors — alcohol, tobacco, poor diet, and lack of physical
activity — have multiple targets and can cause diseases which are not generally
linked to them. Read to know howsmog affects pregnancy?
“For example, exposure to pesticides is known to cause
cancer, but new data is emerging to link it to diabetes as well,” she says.
Similarly, air pollution is known to cause Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary
Diseases (COPD), but there is little understanding on how this can adversely
affect mental health. “Targeting environmental risk factors is essential
if we want to meet the Sustainable Development Goal 3.4, which mandates a
one-third reduction in premature deaths due to lifestyle diseases by 2030,”
says Vibha Varshney, the lead writer of the report that highlights linkages of
pollution to mental health.
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