Thursday, October 13, 2011

A Major Environmental Cause of Death


Science 14 October 2011: 
Vol. 334 no. 6053 pp. 180-181 
DOI: 10.1126/science.1213088
  • POLICY FORUM
PUBLIC HEALTH
  • William J. Martin II*
  • Roger I. Glass*
  • John M. Balbus
  • Francis S. Collins

  • +Author Affiliations
    1. National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
    1. *Author for correspondence. E-mail: wjmartin@mail.nih.gov (W.J.M.); glassr@mail.nih.gov (R.I.G.)
    The World Health Organization (WHO) lists indoor air pollution (IAP) (1) from primitive household cooking fires as the leading environmental cause of death in the world, as it contributes to nearly 2.0 million deaths annually (2)—more deaths than are caused each year by malaria. Almost half of the planet lives in poverty, and those households generally use biomass (wood, crop residues, charcoal, or dung) or coal as fuel for cooking and heating. The primitive fires typically fill homes with dense smoke, blackening walls and ceilings and sickening those within.

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