Environmental pollution: An enormous and invisible burden on health systems in low- and middle-income counties.

Philip J Landrigan, Richard Fuller
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Abstract

Background. Environmental pollution has become the leading risk factor for death in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). The World Health Organization and others calculate that exposures to polluted air - indoor and outdoor, water and soil resulted in 8.4 million deaths in LMICs in 2012. By comparison, HIV/AIDS causes 1.5 million deaths per year, and malaria and tuberculosis Less than 1 million each. The diseases caused by pollution include the traditional scourges of pneumonia and diarrhea, but increasingly they also include chronic, non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as such as heart disease, stroke and cancer. Method. We review the diseases caused by pollution and the multiple economic and human burdens that these diseases impose on health systems in countries with already limited resources. Results. We find that diseases caused by pollution increase health care costs, especially for high-cost NCDs. They impose an unnecessary load on health care delivery systems by increasing hospital staffing needs and thus diverting resources from essential prevention programmes such as childhood immunizations, infection control and maternal and child health. They undermine the development of poor countries by reducing the health, intelligence and economic productivity of entire generations. Pollution is highly preventable and pollution prevention is highly cost-effective. Yet despite their high economic and human costs and amenability to prevention, the diseases caused by pollution have not received the attention that they deserve in policy planning or in the international development agenda. Conclusion. Pollution is not inevitable. It is a problem that can be solved in our lifetime. Given the great impact of pollution on health and health care resources and the high cost-benefit ratio of pollution prevention, efforts to mitigate pollution should become a key strategic priority for international funders and for governments of LMICs. Recommendation. Assisting LMICs to prioritize disease prevention through the management of pollution is a highly cost-effective strategy for enhancing population health, reducing the burden on limited health resources and advancing national development.

环境污染:对低收入和中等收入国家的卫生系统造成巨大而无形的负担。
背景。环境污染已成为低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)的主要死亡风险因素。根据世界卫生组织和其他机构的计算,2012年,暴露于室内和室外污染空气、水和土壤导致中低收入国家840万人死亡。相比之下,艾滋病毒/艾滋病每年造成150万人死亡,疟疾和结核病各不到100万人。污染造成的疾病包括肺炎和腹泻等传统祸害,但也越来越多地包括心脏病、中风和癌症等慢性非传染性疾病。方法。我们审查了由污染引起的疾病,以及这些疾病给资源本已有限的国家的卫生系统造成的多重经济和人类负担。结果。我们发现,污染引起的疾病增加了医疗保健成本,特别是对于高成本的非传染性疾病。它们增加了医院人员配置需求,从而转移了儿童免疫接种、感染控制和妇幼保健等基本预防规划的资源,给卫生保健提供系统带来了不必要的负担。它们降低了整整几代人的健康、智力和经济生产力,从而破坏了穷国的发展。污染是高度可预防的,污染预防具有很高的成本效益。然而,尽管污染造成的疾病的经济和人力成本很高,而且易于预防,但它们在政策规划或国际发展议程中没有得到应有的重视。结论。污染并非不可避免。这是一个可以在我们有生之年解决的问题。鉴于污染对健康和保健资源的巨大影响以及预防污染的高成本效益比,减轻污染的努力应成为国际资助者和中低收入国家政府的一项关键战略优先事项。建议。通过污染管理协助中低收入国家优先预防疾病,是提高人口健康、减轻有限卫生资源负担和促进国家发展的一项极具成本效益的战略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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