World Health Organization: Birth defects in Brazil could top 2,500

If current trends continue in the Zika virus outbreak, and ‘if this pattern is confirmed beyond Latin America and the Caribbean, the world will face a severe public health crisis,’ the health organization’s director-general says.

The World Health Organization said Tuesday that it expects Brazil will have more than 2,500 babies born with a severe birth defect known as microcephaly if current trends continue in the Zika virus outbreak.

Data from Brazil, the epicenter of an epidemic that has hit more than three dozen countries and territories in the Americas, show that about 39 percent of 2,212 investigated cases of microcephaly are already confirmed for the rare congenital condition. To date, that’s 863 babies born with the characteristic abnormally small heads and underdeveloped brains, WHO detailed at a news conference in Geneva.

“If that rate continues, we expect more than 2,500 cases will emerge of babies with brain damage and clinical signs of microcephaly,” said Anthony Costello, who heads WHO’s department of maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health.

WHO Director-General Margaret Chan said new evidence is becoming clear daily about the mosquito-borne virus. A pattern seems to be emerging: Initial detection of Zika is followed within about three weeks by an unusual increase of Guillain-Barré syndrome, a rare condition that can cause paralysis and sometimes death. Detection of microcephaly and other fetal abnormalities typically comes about six months later, WHO officials said, as pregnancies of infected women come to term.

Brazil and Panama are now reporting cases of microcephaly – including 6,480 suspected cases in Brazil. Panama has one reported case. Colombia is investigating many cases for a possible link. A WHO team is currently in Cape Verde to investigate that country’s first reported case of microcephaly, Chan said.

A total of 12 countries and territories have now seen an increase in the incidence of Guillain-Barré or actual lab confirmation of Zika among cases with the syndrome, she said.

Although Zika has hit countries in Latin America and the Caribbean the hardest, Chan warned that no one can predict if it will spread to other parts of the world and trigger the same pattern of health complications. In other affected countries, the virus has not been circulating long enough for pregnancies to come to term, she said.

“If this pattern is confirmed beyond Latin America and the Caribbean, the world will face a severe public health crisis,” she said. Chan said the Zika virus initially looked “reassuringly mild,” with no hospitalizations or deaths reported when it first showed up in Brazil last May.

But in less than a year, she said, “the status of Zika has changed from a mild medical curiosity to a disease with severe public health implications.” The possibility that a mosquito bite could be linked to severe fetal abnormalities “alarmed the public and astonished scientists,” she said.

source: http://www.pressherald.com/

 

 

Building a “Planet 50-50 by 2030”

Today is International Women’s Day, and this year’s theme is “Planet 50-50 by 2030: Step it up for Gender Equality!” The reference to 2030 is about the deadline for the newly adopted Sustainable Development Goal (SDGs) which chart out the new roadmap for global development for all countries of the world for the next 15 years.

But what’s the big commotion? Many people seem to think that there’s no such thing as gender inequality anymore, and that women and girls have reached the same respect, appreciation and acknowledgement as men and boys have as equal members of the societies they live in. Don’t we already live in “Planet 50-50”?

The short answer is: No, we don’t – and we’re not even near yet.

The grim reality is that gender equality has not been fully realized anywhere in the world. Even in the top performing countries, such as the Nordic countries that often are quoted as the most gender equal in the world, inequalities persist that hinder girls’ and women’s ability to be full rights-bearing members of their societies. For example, in my native country Finland, rates of violence against women continue to be the highest in Europe, with nearly half of women over the age of 15 having experienced some form of sexual pr physical violence. In Iceland, a country with reportedly the smallest gender gap in the world, women continue to face a 20% pay gap compared to men. United States, one of the most powerful and wealthiest nations in the world, is one of only eight countries in the world with a rising maternal mortality rate, and countries like India and China, despite their impressive economic growth, still deal with a plethora of violations of women’s rights ranging from incredibly high rates of gender based violence in India to five Chinese feminist being arrested for trying to organize a rally against sexual harassment – on International Women’s Day last year. While progress has been achieved, literally everywhere in the world women still have to fight for their right to be treated as full rights bearing human beings.

Sometimes, people will claim that some of these issues aren’t about inequality or discrimination. That, for example, challenges related to women’s access to health care services aren’t about gender equality but about lack of resources. But here’s the thing: The allocation of resources is always a value statement. The political decisions made about availability of sexual and reproductive services, family planning or contraceptive access are a reflection of the importance placed on protecting and realizing women’s rights, and an indication of what is considered a priority and what isn’t. The inability to ensure that all girls and women have equal access to education, training and meaningful employment is not about lack of resources but about lack of political will. The persistently high rates of sexual and physical violence against women in almost every corner of the world aren’t an indication of lack of rescues to combat sexual violence, but about power structures, These decisions have long lasting implications on not only women’s health and well-being, but their lives and the future of their societies on a much broader level. Without access to education, women can’t obtain the skills they need to become independent and economically secure. They can’t provide for their families and ensure the wellbeing of their children. Without access to sexual and reproductive health services, women cannot take control over their reproductive decisions, and continue to face unnecessary risks related to pregnancy and childbirth. Women who live under constant threat of violence continue to have their lives and rights hindered and violated by fear and injustice, and even in countries where things like education and healthcare for women are taken care for, women still face numerous obstacles and discrimination based solely on their sex in the job market, in politics and in decision making.

That’s why we need a big shift in attitudes, priorities and values to build a “Planet 50-50 by 2030”. It will take more than goals and roadmap to reach a day when women and men are truly treated as equals in the world – and before women everywhere in the world can make decisions about their life, their health, their education, their family and their employment based on what they want – not what they are forced into because of gender discrimination. To build a Planet 50-50, we also need to pay more attention to gaps between women themselves. We need to ensure the commitments we make and action we take reach even the most vulnerable, the most marginalized and those women who are the hardest to reach – those who are still too often left behind from development and progress, and whose voices are left out of global debates and discussions about what women need.

Can we have a gender equal planet by 2030? Absolutely. And I think we should aim to get there much faster, because another 15 years of gender inequality should not be considered acceptable. But before we can start truly building that planet, we need to own up to the fact that it is not lack of resources nor know-how that has prevented us from getting there before. It’s time to start putting women and girls first – because a Planet 50-50 isn’t just in their best interest, but a better world for all of us.

source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/

 

 

Sanford Health expands world clinic model

Sanford Health’s goal in Ghana is a big one:

“To be the No. 1 primary health care provider in the country.”

That’s according to Jim Slack, vice president of Sanford International Clinics, who is helping lead clinic development in the African nation and worldwide.

Sanford International Clinics was formed as part of T. Denny Sanford’s $400 million donation in 2007 with a mission to provide care to underserved populations worldwide. And while it started with pediatric clinics in the U.S., the organization’s eye has shifted to Africa, the Argus Leader (http://argusne.ws/1TQlVXV ) reported.

In the past 60 days, Sanford has opened 12 clinics in Ghana, for a total of 17. The plan is to develop at least 300 clinics in the country.

It’s a venture that has brought Sanford into a new relationship with Global Health Corps., a New York-based nonprofit led and founded by Barbara Pierce Bush, daughter of former President George W. Bush.

“I’m very impressed and inspired by Sanford International Clinic’s commitment to working and supporting partner organizations, at every level, in the areas they work,” Bush said in an emailed response to questions.

“It’s truly wonderful to be supported by such an innovative and inspiring health care leader. There is a great deal of overlap between our work, so our relationship is a busy two-way street for sharing best practices, networks and insight.”

Global Health Corps., or GHC, was founded in 2009 to place professionals from Africa and the U.S. in yearlong paid fellowships to work with local organizations to improve health care access and outcomes. The organization plans to work with Sanford to develop health care professionals and identify and implement best practices in areas such as electronic medical records, supply change management, medication standardization and clinical education.

The two met through philanthropist T. Denny Sanford.

“Denny had a relationship with Laura and Barbara Bush and was aware of Barbara’s initiative,” Slack said. “The focus of that really looked to align with what we do with Sanford International Clinics. He brought us together.”

That was about a year ago, and the organizations started talking about what each was doing in Africa and what synergies might exist.

“For us, it was really quick to identify,” Slack said. “She’s got thought leaders and fellows and alumni she’s recruited from all over the world. She’s got top talent knocking at her door to be part of her program. Because of the depth of operations we’re building, it just lends to a great experience for these fellows to dig in and find meaningful projects.”

Bush, too, praises the new relationship.

“It’s not often that you find such a philosophical synergy in a partnership,” she said. “I think both of our organizations share that deep commitment to ensuring access to quality health care for everyone and the belief that where someone is born or lives should never dictate how healthy and empowered a life they can live.”

source: http://www.washingtontimes.com/

 

 

World Health Day 2016: Beat diabetes

In 2008, an estimated 347 million people in the world had diabetes and the prevalence is growing, particularly in low- and middle-income countries.

In 2012, the disease was the direct cause of some 1.5 million deaths, with more than 80% of those occurring in low- and middle-income countries. WHO projects that diabetes will be the 7th leading cause of death by 2030.

Diabetes is a chronic disease that occurs either when the pancreas does not produce enough insulin or when the body cannot effectively use the insulin it produces. Insulin, a hormone that regulates blood sugar, gives us the energy that we need to live. If it cannot get into the cells to be burned as energy, sugar builds up to harmful levels in the blood.

There are 2 main forms of the diabetes. People with type 1 diabetes typically make none of their own insulin and therefore require insulin injections to survive. People with type 2 diabetes, the form that comprises some 90% of cases, usually produce their own insulin, but not enough or they are unable to use it properly. People with type 2 diabetes are typically overweight and sedentary, 2 conditions that raise a person’s insulin needs.

Over time, high blood sugar can seriously compromise every major organ system in the body, causing heart attacks, strokes, nerve damage, kidney failure, blindness, impotence and infections that can lead to amputations.

World Health Day 2016: Key messages

WHO is focusing the next World Health Day, on 7 April 2016, on diabetes because:

  1. The diabetes epidemic is rapidly increasing in many countries, with the documented increase most dramatic in low- and middle-income countries.
  2. A large proportion of diabetes cases are preventable. Simple lifestyle measures have been shown to be effective in preventing or delaying the onset of type 2 diabetes. Maintaining normal body weight, engaging in regular physical activity, and eating a healthy diet can reduce the risk of diabetes.
  3. Diabetes is treatable. Diabetes can be controlled and managed to prevent complications. Increasing access to diagnosis, self-management education and affordable treatment are vital components of the response.
  4. Efforts to prevent and treat diabetes will be important to achieve the global Sustainable Development Goal 3 target of reducing premature mortality from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) by one-third by 2030. Many sectors of society have a role to play, including governments, employers, educators, manufacturers, civil society, private sector, the media and individuals themselves.

Goal of World Health Day 2016: Scale up prevention, strengthen care, and enhance surveillance

The main goals of the World Health Day 2016 campaign will be to:

  1. Increase awareness about the rise in diabetes, and its staggering burden and consequences, in particular in low-and middle-income countries;
  2. Trigger a set of specific, effective and affordable actions to tackle diabetes. These will include steps to prevent diabetes and diagnose, treat and care for people with diabetes; and
  3. Launch the first Global report on diabetes, which will describe the burden and consequences of diabetes and advocate for stronger health systems to ensure improved surveillance, enhanced prevention, and more effective management of diabetes.

source: http://www.who.int/

 

 

Nation raises travel alert for Tonga over Zika virus

Taiwan has raised its travel alert for Tonga to yellow, the second lowest on its four-color alert system, after the Pacific island country reported more than 500 suspected Zika virus cases and seven confirmed cases.
In a travel notice the Ministry of Foreign Affairs raised the travel alert for Tonga from gray, the lowest alert level, to yellow, given that the country has declared the mosquito-borne Zika virus an epidemic.

The ministry urged Taiwanese nationals who plan to travel to Tonga to think twice about going there and take precautions to prevent mosquito bites if a visit to Tonga is necessary.

Pregnant women and those planning a pregnancy should postpone trips to the country, it said.

The ministry also noted the World Health Organization’s warning of a possible outbreak of the Zika virus in Vanuatu in the South Pacific, saying that it will maintain a yellow alert for the island country.

The ministry has a gray alert in effect for the South Pacific island countries of Fiji and Samoa, as well French dependency New Caledonia and French Polynesia, but it urged pregnant women and those who plan a pregnancy not to visit those areas.

A yellow travel alert remains in effect for the Solomon Islands after that Pacific island country reported five confirmed Zika virus cases and seven suspected cases, the ministry said Thursday.

In addition to the South Pacific region, Taiwan has also issued a travel advisory for Thailand over the Zika virus.

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) issued its second-highest travel advisory in its three tier system Sunday for Thailand after the World Health Organization listed the country as one of the countries to report indigenous Zika virus cases.

In view of the Zika emergency, the CDC has issued a travel alert for Central and South America and the Caribbean, the second-highest advisory in its three-tier system.

It has also issued a travel watch, its lowest advisory, for Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Gabon.

The Zika virus disease is caused by a virus transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes and the virus is known to circulate in Africa, the Americas, Asia and the Pacific, according to the World Health Organization.

Zika viral transmission since 2007 has been documented in 46 countries and territories,

A total of 34 countries have reported locally acquired infections between 2015 and 2016, six have indications of viral circulation, five have been exposed to the Zika virus but the outbreak has ended, and one has a locally acquired case but without vector borne transmission, the WHO said.

source: http://www.chinapost.com.tw/

 

 

Analysis: New investment policy will likely support local pharma industry

The government issued the tenth economic stimulus package last week, opening up several commercial sectors to foreign investors. One of the sectors is that of raw materials for medicine, where businesses can now be 100 percent owned by foreigners, an increase from the previous 85 percent maximum ownership under Presidential Decree No. 39/2014. The government is hoping that the new ownership policy will attract more investment to the industry of pharmaceutical raw materials, reduce dependence on imports and, in turn, bring down medicine prices.

Raw materials account for 60 percent to 80 percent of production costs in the pharmaceutical industry, while 90 percent to 95 percent of the raw material is still imported from China, India, Europe and the US. The strong reliance on imported content makes the industry sensitive to exchange rate fluctuations, while at the same time the industry has a domestic market orientation.

Indonesia’s pharmaceutical market still holds future potential, given the country’s large population and the fact that medicine is a basic need. The local pharmaceutical market value has grown by 11 percent for the past five years and reached an estimated value of Rp 69 trillion this year. Prescription medicines make up 59 percent of the market, while over-the-counter (OTC) drugs account for 41 percent.

There are some important drivers for growth in the local pharmaceutical industry. First, Indonesia is currently increasing its residents’ access to health services with the implementation of general insurance through BPJS Kesehatan. Second, there is rising health awareness, backed by rising per-capita income and improving economic conditions.

Indonesia’s large market has driven investment in the pharmaceutical sector. In 2015, the combined chemicals and pharmaceutical investment amounted to Rp 45.2 trillion, or 8.3 percent of Indonesia’s total investment. Of the total, 54 percent was foreign investment. Realized domestic investment in the pharmaceutical sector grew by 44.7 percent per year over the 2010-2015 period, much higher than foreign investment, which grew by an average annual rate of 19.8 percent. Recently, the Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) recorded investment interest from India, Japan, South Korea and China, and several foreign companies proposed joint ventures with Indonesian ones.

To promote the development of the pharmaceutical raw material industry, the government has issued Health Ministry Regulation No. 87/2013 on the development of medicinal raw materials. Several pharmaceutical companies are pioneering the development of raw materials in Indonesia. For example, Kimia Farma has built a plant for pharmaceutical salt (the construction started in 2015 and is scheduled to be completed in 2016) and will build another for atorvastatin, simvastatin, rosuvastatin, clopidogrel, and pantoprazol this year. Pharmaceutical salt is a common raw material for intravenous liquids, tablets, vaccines, syrup, oral rehydration salt (ORS), hemodialysis liquids and health drinks, among others.

However, the development of the medicinal raw materials industry still faces major problems. First, it lacks supplies from domestic petrochemical industries to produce synthetic medicines, resulting in higher production costs, because those supplies need to be imported. Second, it requires a large amount of investment and is a long-term process that needs an excellent and supportive business environment. Third, the development of the medicine industry and its derivatives is subject to price fluctuations, discouraging investors to enter the business.

Fourth, there is a lack of synergy among academia, private businesses and the government. Research on the development of pharmaceutical raw materials by Indonesian experts is still limited to pilot and laboratory-scale projects and rarely commercially exploited at an industrial level. Fifth, the national market for medicinal raw materials is relatively small in comparison to the minimum production capacity in order to achieve low production costs. To date, domestically produced raw materials have not yet reached an optimal production scale, rendering them uncompetitive with materials from foreign suppliers.

Will the foreign ownership in the industry have a significant impact on Indonesia’s pharmaceutical industry? We assert that the policy is supportive for the development of the domestic pharmaceutical industry, though its impact can only be materialized in the medium or long term. Furthermore, we believe that the new foreign ownership policy should be synergized with other policies to develop the raw material industry for medicines, for example, tax incentives for companies that are able to produce raw materials at their own production facilities. In addition, any import taxes for supplies that are needed by the medicinal raw material industry should be removed.

Moreover, the development of the pharmaceutical raw material industry should prioritize materials that have potential in both the domestic and export markets — mainly ASEAN — such as paracetamol, penicillin and pharmaceutical salt. Accordingly, we can expect its production capacity to meet a minimum production scale in order to achieve low-cost production.

The ASEAN market has great potential, especially in the context of the ASEAN Economic Community. The Indonesian Pharmaceutical Association estimates that nine to 11 pharmaceutical companies in Indonesia have exported their products to ASEAN countries. In 2013, Indonesia commanded 30 percent of the ASEAN pharmaceutical market share, the biggest among ASEAN countries.

In addition to the chemical synthetic approach, we should invest more in the development herbal and biotechnological medicine to exploit Indonesia’s biodiversity. Finally, we should also redouble efforts to strengthen synergies among academia, businesses and the government through working groups and national research centers to help develop the pharmaceutical raw material industry.

See more at: http://www.thejakartapost.com

 

World Health Organisation a ‘toothless tiger’

An Australian academic’s labelling the World Health Organisation a “Toothless Tiger”.

An editorial in the Australian Medical Journal titled ‘Toughen-up WHO’ criticises the organisation’s softer approach when countries don’t follow it’s regulations.

Associate Professor Sanjaya Senanayake said WHO needs to work around the complexities of new funding models that may dictate how their work is carried out during a viral outbreak.

He said they’ve reacted fast in the wake of Zika but need to keep up with a growing number of Non Government Organisations that weren’t around during it’s founding.

He said the organisation needs to learn to work with NGOs to improve not only the response in different areas but also the follow-through of regulations. Non-medical personnel, for example, would be extremely helpful to carry out preventative and decontamination tasks.

But Senanayake said it’s not all about WHO sharpening it’s teeth; countries can also do more to keep the momentum going.

“They can improve their relationships with the regional offices, they can have more non-medical staff, because during an outbreak there are so many aspects of a country and region’s infrastructure that needs to be addressed.”

Senanayake said there’s room for punitive measures such as sanctions on countries to make them comply to WHO instructions.

“I think there’s a danger that if the World Health Organisation is being ignored during an outbreak that people will notice that and be less inclined to take them seriously.”

Meanwhile Russia has registered its first case of a person infected with the Zika virus after a tourist contracted the disease in the Dominican Republic.

The World Health Organisation declared the spread of the disease a global health emergency earlier this month.

source: http://www.newstalkzb.co.nz/

 

 

Critically important to human health: What are fluoroquinolones?

Fluoroquinolone antibiotics were developed in the 1970s and first used in human medicine in the 1980s. The drugs are used for treating, amongst other conditions, human food poisoning illnesses such as campylobacter, salmonella and Ecoli.

Because of their important role in treating severe cases of such infections, the World Health Organization (WHO) has classified fluoroquinolones as being “critically important” to human healthcare, and said that reducing the use of the substances on livestock farms should be prioritised.

This is because of growing global evidence that the overuse of the antibiotics on factory farms is fuelling the development of drug resistant forms of food poisoning bugs which can be passed to consumers via contaminated meat. Those who develop complications requiring medical treatment may not respond to antibiotics prescribed by doctors, potentially putting lives at risk.

One of the most commonly used fluoroquinolones in chicken production is enrofloxacin, which is closely related to ciprofloxacin, a fluoroquinolone used in human medicine. Enrofloxacin is used on poultry farms to tackle bacterial infections. The drug is typically administered in birds’ drinking water, meaning whole flocks are dosed with the drugs at one time.

Concerns over the links between fluoroquinolone use on farms and antibiotic resistant bacteria were raised as far back as 1998 when a House of Lords committee urged the poultry industry to reduce its use of fluoroquinolones.

Despite a temporary reduction in the use of the antibiotics following the calls, veterinary usage of the drugs has increased steadily in the years since. This has proved controversial, particularly as the use of the antibiotics in poultry production was outlawed in the US in 2005, and is banned in poultry farms in Australia, Finland and Denmark.

Although fluoroquinolones only account for a small proportion of the overall volume of antibiotics used in UK livestock farming each year – in terms of active ingredient, experts say the drugs are highly potent and weigh significantly less than other antibiotics commonly used. The European Medicines Agency has estimated that one dose of fluoroquinolones weighs 30 to 70 times less than one dose of tetracycline antibiotics

source: https://www.thebureauinvestigates.com/

 

 

Herbal Medicine, Magic Behind Good Health, Longevity – Ben Amodu

Pharmacist Ben Amodu is a researcher in herbal products and an expert in phytho-medicinal research. In this interview with DAVID ADUGE-ANI, he believes that herbal medicines are the solution for good health and longevity.

Sir could you explain the economic benefits a Third World country such as Nigeria could derive from herbal treatments?

As you know, if a country’s exports exceed its imports, the result will be favourable balance of trade. I have participated in various expositions and workshops within and outside the country and was able to observe the response of participants.

A patient from London who was perfectly treated with our herbal supplements recently sent this into my mail: “Hello Sir, l give glory to God”

He told me that he visited other hospitals in India, and was advised to continue with his medication. Positive results of our supplement combinations to patients in 2013 moved Se Kroa Ehoule, the director and the coordinator of program of national promotion of traditional medicine in the country commended us.

If herbs can be recommended for the cure of the highest disease of the lung, then asthma being a disease of the lung is a small thing to the herbs.

The case of a hepatitis patient I mentioned above, whose UK medical consultant saw as incurable are ways of attracting international trade in the country which you know will go a long way to enhance favourable balance of trade. And if the wonders being performed by herbs on both communicable and non-communicable diseases within and outside the country can be encouraged by the government, herbal tourism will be attracted in Nigeria, because people will be coming from all over the world to Nigeria which in turn will attract foreign exchange.

Are you satisfied with how the governments have been going about this branch of medicine?

Well, I won’t tell you that I am satisfied, but with all these developments so far, I believe that the present government will begin to encourage it. World Health Organization (WHO) recommended herbs for treatment of modern diseases. I want to inform you that the magic behind good health and longevity of life which China, India and other Asian countries have been enjoying are found in the use of herbs.

You have said it severally that herbal medicines succeed where its orthodox counterparts fail. Can you explain this?

I can give you instances, where herbs treat and cure communicable and no communicable diseases more than their orthodox counterparts.

It would surprise you to know that hepatitis kills about 11 people in this country on daily basis.

There are ailments such as kidney diseases, among others which have been found to be resistant to herbal treatments. What is your opinion on this?

The fact of the matter is that we don’t value what we have in this country. But thank God that today people have begun to testify to what we have after having used the orthodox and the herbal medicines.

What would be your recommendations to government regarding herbal treatments in the country?

I would task the federal government to look inward. The reason is that the diseases termed incurable can now be cured and this is based from results we have been receiving commendations from our various patients within and outside the country who were treated with herbs.

Orthodox branch of medicine has been recognised in many countries of the world for the treatment of modern diseases even more than herbs. Could you react to this?

I am a pharmacist and have been in phytho medicine research for a long time now. I have said it above and still want to repeatedly inform you that the World Health Organization (WHO) has issued releases many times on the need for using herbal medicines in treatment of ailments in the world; be them communicable or non-communicable ones.

Herbal medicines are very good in the treatment of diseases that people grow into as they age and in medical term, they are called non-communicable diseases. Among them are diseases of cardiovascular of high triglyceride levels in blood like high blood pressure (HBP), diabetes, stroke, ulcer and asthma.

source: http://leadership.ng/

 

 

Air pollution is now a global ‘public health emergency’, according to the World Health Organisation

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has said that air pollution is now a “public health emergency” across the globe, in a stark warning about the dangers of unclean air in our cities.

The warning comes at a time when air pollution is high on the agenda – in December, Chinese authorities issued a pollution ‘red alert’ in Beijing, forcing schools and businesses to close down and urging people to stay indoors in order to protect them from the deadly smog.

And just eight days into 2016, London breached its own legal limit on air pollution for the entire year. Under EU regulations, pollution levels in London are allowed to exceed the maximum safe limit for 18 hours a year – this allowance had been burned through completely by Friday 8 January.

Speaking to The Guardian, Maria Neira, the head of public health at the WHO, said: “We have a public health emergency in many countries from pollution.”

“It’s dramatic, one of the biggest problems we are facing globally, with horrible future costs to society.”

Neira told the paper that although the short-term effects of pollution on city-dwellers’ health can be severe, consistently high levels could be creating a ticking time bomb of public health problems.

Exposure to air pollution can cause health issues like asthma, heart disease and potentially even dementia, conditions which require medical attention and hospital beds. If air pollution levels stay high, Neira believes global health services in the future could be put under even more strain than they are now.

According to the UN, 3.3 million people around the world die prematurely due to the effects of air pollution every year. Most of these deaths occur in China, India and Pakistan, but the UK is badly affected too.

According to a estimates made by researchers from King’s College London, almost 9,500 people in London alone died prematurely in 2010 due to pollution – 3,537 from the effects of nitrogen dioxide (NO2), which is expelled by engines and power stations, and 5,879 from PM2.5, the name given to the smallest particles of pollution which can penetrate deep into the lungs and cause respiratory problems.

Across the UK, the number of early deaths that can be blamed on pollution could be as high as 60,000 a year, according to a report from official advisory body the Committee on the Medical Effects of Air Pollutants, which was reported by The Sunday Times.

The Government is now being put under pressure to take swift action on the issue, having been accused in the past of wilfully ignoring air pollution reduction targets.

This pressure will likely increase with the WHO’s release of pollution figures next month, which are expected to show that air quality has continued to decline across the world in the past year

source: http://www.independent.co.uk/