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A child’s world centres around the home, school and the local community. These
should be healthy places where children can thrive, protected from disease.
But in reality, these places are
often so unhealthy that they underlie the majority of deaths and a huge burden
of disease among children in the developing world. More than 5 million children
from 0 to 14 years old die every year from diseases linked to the environments
in which they live, learn and play - their home, their school, their community.
Many environmental threats to
children’s health are aggravated by persistent poverty, conflicts, natural and
man-made disasters, and social inequity. The children worst affected are those
in the developing world but there are many children in the more developed, even
the richest, countries, who are also at risk.
Some environmental diseases
result in long-term disability; others cause more immediate and short-term
effects. Some may result in conditions such as blindness, crippling disease and
mental retardation. Those children who are chronically sick or disabled cannot
regularly attend school and so their social and intellectual development
suffers.
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