Main Navigation
 
Search
Advanced Search>>
Free Newsletter
Subscribe
Unsubscribe
 
 


Health Headlines

Get the latest news in prevention and health matters. This feature includes daily postings and recent archives to keep you up to date on health reports and wires around the world.
Weekly Wellness
Get informed with weekly wellness facts in a diversity of health topics from prevention to fitness and nutrition.
Tips
Great tips on what you need to know about keeping healthy and active all year round.

 
U.N. Health Body Warns
Against 'Kitchen Killer'

Some 1.6 million people, mainly small children, die each year from a "kitchen killer" -- disease brought on by inhaling smoke from cooking stoves and indoor fires, the World Health Organization said.

"While the millions of deaths from well-known communicable diseases often make headlines, indoor air pollution remains a silent and unreported killer," the United Nations' agency said.

Nearly half of the world cooks using fuels like dung, wood, agricultural residues and coal, which give off a poisonous cocktail that "more than doubles the risk of respiratory illness such as bronchitis and pneumonia," it said in a joint statement with the U.N. Development Program (UNDP).

Women and children living in poor rural areas of developing countries, who cook with a typical wood-fired stove, would be subject to levels of carbon monoxide and other noxious fumes that were seven to 500 times internationally accepted levels.

"The amount of smoke from these fires is the equivalent of consuming two packs of cigarettes a day," WHO said, adding one life was lost every 20 seconds to the "killer in the kitchen."

Children under 5 were particularly at risk of pneumonia, with some 900,000 deaths reported each year linked to smoke inhalation. Bronchitis was the main killer of women.

Although long term the solution was to replace solid fuels, there were cheap and quick steps that developing countries and rural communities could take in the meantime, said Eva Rehfuess, WHO technical officer for indoor air pollution.

Keeping children away from smoky areas and using dried wood along with lids on pans to reduce cooking time were simple actions that would reduce the toll, she said.

Reference Source 89
October 15, 2004


For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick Prevention Resources".

 
Select a Channel