Friday 21 June 2013

AIR POLLUTION: CAUSES AND EFFECTS

As humans and majorly Nigerians, we are all victims of air pollution in no small way. It’s a pity that most of us are quite ignorant of just how damaging it is to our organs and our being as a whole.

Air pollution occurs when gases, dust particles, fumes (or smoke) or odour are introduced into the atmosphere in a way that makes it harmful to humans, animals and plant. This is because the air becomes dirty (contaminated or unclean). 

Things that pollute the air are called pollutants. Examples of pollutants include nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxides, hydrocarbons, sulphur oxides (usually from factories), sand or dust particles, and organic compounds that can evaporate and enter the atmosphere.



 Causes Of Air Pollution

Air pollution can result from both human and natural actions. Natural events that pollute the air include forest fires, volcanic eruptions, wind erosion, pollen dispersal, evaporation of organic compounds and natural radioactivity.


Here are some human activities that result in air pollution

Emissions From Industries And Manufacturing Activities
Have you seen a manufacturing company before? You will notice that there are long tubes (called chimneys) erected high into the air, with lots of smoke and fumes coming out of it.











Waste incinerators, manufacturing industries and power plants emit high levels of carbon monoxide, organic compounds, and chemicals into the air. This happens almost everywhere that people live. Petroleum refineries also release lots of hydrocarbons into the air.

Burning Fossil Fuels

Following the industrial age, transportation has become a key part of our lives. Cars,heavy duty trucks, trains, shipping vessels and airplanes all burn lots of fossil fuels to work. Emissions from automobile engines contain both primary and secondary pollutants. This is a major cause of pollution, and one that is very difficult to manage. This is because humans rely heavily on vehicles and engines for transporting people, good and services.













Fumes from car exhaust contain dangerous gases such as carbon monoxide, oxides of nitrogen, hydrocarbons and particulates. On their own, they cause great harm to people who breathe them. Additionally, they react with environmental gases to create further toxic gases. 

Household and Farming Chemicals
Crop dusting, fumigating homes, household cleaning products or painting supplies, over the counter insect/pest killers, fertilizer dust emit harmful chemicals into the air and cause pollution. In many case, when we use these chemicals at home or offices with no or little ventilation, we may fall ill if we breathe them.

Effects Of Air Pollution

Acidification
Chemical reactions involving air pollutants can create acidic compounds which can cause harm to vegetation and buildings. Sometimes, when an air pollutant, such as sulfuric acid combines with the water droplets that make up clouds, the water droplets become acidic, forming acid rain. When acid rain falls over an area, it can kill trees and harm animals, fish, and other wildlife. 

Eutrophication
Rain can carry and deposit the Nitrogen in some pollutants on rivers and soils. This will adversely affect the nutrients in the soil and water bodies. This can result in algae growth in lakes and water bodies, and make conditions for other living organism harmful.

Ground-Level Ozone
Chemical reactions involving air pollutants create a poisonous gas ozone (O3). Gas Ozone can affect people’s health and can damage vegetation types and some animal life too.

Particulate Matter
Air pollutants can be in the form of particulate matter which can be very harmful to our health. The level of effect usually depends on the length of time of exposure, as well the kind and concentration of chemicals and particles exposed to. Short-term effects include irritation to the eyes, nose and throat, and upper respiratory infections such as bronchitis and pneumonia. Others include headaches, nausea, and allergic reactions. Short-term air pollution can aggravate the medical conditions of individuals with asthma and emphysema. Long-term health effects can include chronic respiratory disease, lung cancer, heart disease, and even damage to the brain, nerves, liver, or kidneys. Continual exposure to air pollution affects the lungs of growing children and may aggravate or complicate medical conditions in the elderly. 

Here are some disturbing statistics about Air Pollution
·         Around 3 billion people cook and heat their homes using open fires and leaky stoves burning biomass (wood, animal dung and crop waste) and coal.
  • Nearly 2 million people die prematurely from illness attributable to indoor air pollution from household solid fuel use.
  • Nearly 50% of pneumonia deaths among children under five are due to particulate matter inhaled from indoor air pollution.
  • More than 1 million people a year die from chronic obstructive respiratory disease (COPD) that develops due to exposure to such indoor air pollution.
  • Both women and men exposed to heavy indoor smoke are 2-3 times more likely to develop COPD
Around 3 billion people still cook and heat their homes using solid fuels in open fires and leaky stoves. About 2.7 billion burn biomass (wood, animal dung, crop waste) and a further 0.4 billion use coal.


 Such cooking and heating produces high levels of indoor air pollution with a range of health-damaging pollutants, including small soot particles that penetrate deep into the lungs. In poorly ventilated dwellings, indoor smoke can be 100 times higher than acceptable levels for small particles. Exposure is particularly high among women and young children, who spend the most time near the domestic hearth.

Effects On Health
Nearly 2 million people a year die prematurely from illness attributable to indoor air pollution due to solid fuel use (2004 data). Among these deaths, 44% are due to pneumonia, 54% from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and 2% from lung cancer.

Pneumonia
Nearly half of deaths among children under five years old from acute lower respiratory infections (ALRI) are due to particulate matter inhaled from indoor air pollution from household solid fuels (WHO, 2009).

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Women exposed to heavy indoor smoke are three times as likely to suffer from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (e.g. chronic bronchitis), than women who use cleaner fuels. Among men (who already have a heightened risk of chronic respiratory disease due to their higher rates of smoking), exposure to indoor smoke nearly doubles that risk.

Lung Cancer
Approximately 1.5% of annual lung cancer deaths are attributable to exposure to carcinogens form indoor air pollution. As with bronchitis, the risk for women is higher, due to their role in food preparation as well as their comparatively lower rates of smoking. Women exposed to indoor smoke thus have double the risk of lung cancer in comparison with those not exposed.

Other Health Impacts
More generally, small particulate matter and other pollutants in indoor smoke inflame the airways and lungs, impairing immune response and reducing the oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood.
There is also evidence of links between indoor air pollution and low birth weight, TB, ischaemic heart disease, naso-pharyngeal and laryngeal cancers.


Friday 14 June 2013

World Blood Donor Day


…Give The Gift Of Life: Donate Blood
Have you ever wanted to give back to humanity and didn’t have a clue what to do/give?
Have you ever wanted to do something absolutely humanitarian with the intent and realization that you would get nothing back in return?
Then today should be an amazing day for you to do just that.
Today is the World Blood Donor Day. This day serves to raise awareness of the need for safe blood and blood products and to thank voluntary unpaid blood donors for their life-saving gifts of blood.  You don’t have to be a doctor to save lives. Sharing your bloodline is a considerable gift: Each donation can save up to three people 
With this year’s slogan "Give the gift of life: donate blood", it couldn't capture the essence of the importance of donating blood more.
This year’s campaign is a very significant one too as it is the 10th anniversary of World Blood Donor Day,  and it will focus on the value of donated blood to the patient, not only in saving life, but also in helping people live longer and more productive lives.
Safe blood supplies are a scarce commodity, especially in developing countries like ours. World Blood Donor Day is an occasion to raise awareness of the problem and thank donors worldwide.


BEFORE DONATION  
  • Maintain a healthy iron level in your diet by eating iron rich foods, such as red meat, fish, poultry, beans, spinach, iron-fortified cereals and raisins.
  • Get a good night's slee
  •  Drink an extra 16 oz. of water or nonalcoholic fluids before the donation
  • Eat a healthy meal before your donation. Avoid fatty foods, such as hamburgers, fries or ice cream before donating. (Fatty foods can affect the tests we do on your blood. If there is too much fat in your blood, your donation cannot be tested for infectious diseases and the blood will not be used for transfusion.)
  • If you are a platelet donor, remember that your system must be free of aspirin for two days prior to donation
  • Take your temperature
  • Bathe before you donate                                        
  • Your Hemoglobin level should not be low. Your blood pressure should not be low. You Must not be suffering from hepatitis B, hepatitis C, Syphilis, HIV/AIDS and malaria
  • Concerning tattoos and piercings, most donors with tattoos/piercing must wait at least 6 months after tattoo/piercing application before donating blood.
  •  Remember to bring your donor card, driver's license or two other forms of ID.



AFTER DONATION
  • Drink an extra four (8 ounce) glasses of liquids and avoid alcohol over the next 24 hours.
  •  Remove the wrap bandage (if you had one put on your arm) within the next hour.
  •  Keep the strip bandage on for the next several hours.
  • To avoid a skin rash, clean the area around the strip bandage with soap and water.
  • Do not do any heavy lifting or vigorous exercise for the rest of the day.
  •  If the needle site starts to bleed, apply pressure to it and raise your arm straight up for about 5-10 minutes or until bleeding stops.
  •   If you experience dizziness or light-headedness after donation, stop what you are doing and sit down or lie down until you feel better. Avoid performing any activity where fainting may lead to injury for at least 24 hours.
  •  Do not smoke for thirty minutes and avoid smoking areas.
  • Avoid drinking alcohol for a minimum of 4 hours.




http://greatist.com/health/donating-blood

Wednesday 12 June 2013

World Day Against Child Labour …No To Child Labour In Domestic Work



I pass the same route almost every day on my way to work, and I have for almost a year now. I see the same girl clothed in what could have been considered decent clothes maybe three years ago. She can’t be older than eight years old. I see her doing the same thing every single day; she’s either bent over ‘fanning’ the firewood fumes or knee sprung on the floor peeling plantain or some other fruit or vegetable.
At first, I thought nothing of this view after all it doesn’t hurt to be ‘responsible’ at an early age. Yes?
But then again, it occurred to me that I had never seen her in a school uniform or was her school perpetually on a holiday? And even if she was wearing a uniform, was that her school premises?

Child labour in domestic work goes highly unnoticed in this society of ours mainly because it’s almost ‘subtle’, if I dare say. And in most cases, the accused perpetrators of the act always give the excuse of insufficient finance and the need to make extra cash for the family. I don’t pretend to be ignorant about our country’s deplorable economic state. However, my question to these people is always the same, is depriving yourself the chance at a ‘better life’ by denying your child an education (A right that is so ‘rightly’ his) worth the sacrifice in the long run?

As we join the rest of the world to mark the World Day Against Child Labour 2013 with this year’s theme ‘No To Child Labour In Domestic Work’,let us not forget that these children have no one to speak up for them. You are their voice, the key to their justice and sometimes, their only way out.
In a new report issued for World Day Against Child Labour, find below some heart breaking statistics about our children.

·         A staggering 15 million children under the age of 14 are working across Nigeria. Many are exposed to long hours of work in dangerous and unhealthy environments, carrying too much responsibility for their age.

·         About six million working children in Nigeria, equally split between boys and girls, do not attend school at all

·         Over eight million children manage, at least partly, to stay in school and work in their spare time to pay education fees

·         In Nigeria, child labour does mostly occur in semi-formal and informal businesses with hundreds of thousands young domestic servants, mainly working for prosperous urban families. Domestic servants are the least visible category and often sexually harassed

·         The International Labour Organization (ILO) warns that a staggeringly high number of children are still caught in hazardous work – some 115 million of the world’s 215 million child labourers

·         The report also says that although the overall number of children aged 5 to 17 in hazardous work declined between 2004 and 2008, the number aged 15-17 actually increased by 20 per cent during the same period, from 52 million to 62 million

  • Most of the decline in the total numbers of children in hazardous work is among girls
  • Over 60 per cent of children in hazardous work are boys
  • Hazardous work is more commonly found in agriculture including fishing, forestry, livestock-herding and aquaculture in addition to subsistence and commercial farming.


Where Do Children In Nigeria Work?
·         Public places such as streets and markets

  •       Street vendors (64%)
  •       Industries and mechanic workshops
  •       Beggars (13%)
  •       Mechanic / Vulcanizers (24%)
  •       Bus conductors (17%) 
  •           Shoe shiners (4%)                                         
  •       Iron / metal workers (6%)
  •       Car washers/watchers (6%)                        
  •       Carpenters (14%), 
  •       Tailors / weavers (14%)
  •       Scavengers (5%)                                               
  •       Hairdressers / barbers (18%)
  •           Feet washers (8%)                                        
  •       Caterers (8%)
  •           Semi-public settings such as cottage       
  •       Private households
  •           Domestic servants                                           
  •        Agricultural plantation and quarries
  •           Farm and quarry workers

http://www.unicef.org/wcaro/WCARO_Nigeria_Factsheets_ChildLabour.pdf