Guest guest Posted February 2, 2006 Report Share Posted February 2, 2006 One in Ten Canadian Children Afflicted with Asthma By Joan Delaney Epoch Times Staff Feb 02, 2006 http://english.epochtimes.com/news/6-2-2/37667.html (Getty Images) High-res image (1227 x 825 px, 300 dpi) The occurrence of childhood asthma in Canada has risen fourfold in the last 20 years, reaching a level where one in ten children is now affected by the respiratory ailment, a new report says. The report, which calls asthma " one of the most chronic conditions in Canadian children, " explores the link between asthma and pollution and says that about 20 percent of boys and 15 percent of girls aged between eight and 11 have been diagnosed with the disease. " The air children breathe is an important source of exposure to substances that may potentially harm their health, " said the report, which was undertaken by the Commission for Environmental Co- operation (CEC), a Montreal-based group created as part of the North American Free Trade Agreement. " Exposures in early childhood when the lungs and immune systems are not fully developed raise concerns that children may respond more adversely than adults would. " While asthma can be caused by hereditary factors, the CEC lays most of the blame for the epidemic on both indoor and outdoor pollutants. Exposure to indoor toxins such as moulds, smoke, fumes from plastics and chemicals, dust mites and animal dander can trigger the condition. Two factors mentioned in particular are smoke from wood or coal fires and second-hand tobacco smoke. While the latter is less of a problem than in the past, said the study, it remains a cause for concern. Rick , executive director of the environmental watchdog group Environmental Defense, says most of the pollutants spewed into the air are associated with respiratory illness, and that the Great Lakes area with its concentrated population and coal-fired power plants is especially in need of attention. " We now see smog and taste smog at all times of the year in many cities and towns right across the country, " says . " The fact is that within a few years, Canada went from an environmental leader to an environmental laggard. The OECD, which is hardly known as a radical environmental organisation, ranks Canada at the bottom of the barrel amongst industrialised countries for pollution prevention. " says that when parliament resumes, one of the new government's first items to look at will be pollution, as the mandatory review of Canada's Environmental Protection Act is due this year. He says that although the Conservatives didn't have pollution as one of their top five priorities during the election, it was a part of their platform, so he expects there may be some progress. " The Conservatives did actually make some promises on pollution. They promised some action on clean water and clean air and Great Lakes protection...so we're certainly hoping that they'll follow through in a timely way. " Symptoms of asthma include wheezing, coughing and trouble breathing due to obstructed air passages. CEC said the illness " represents a tremendous human and economic burden for millions of children and adults in North America, " and also found that asthma can be more common in certain groups, especially in children living in southern Ontario and those from lower-income, inner-city populations. Professor Ungar, a researcher at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children, says that a study she was involved with found that many families can't afford the often very expensive treatments that can effectively control the illness. Ungar points out that while Quebec has a universal health plan which covers the cost of drugs, people who live in most other provinces need to have some kind of insurance plan lest they " fall through the cracks. " " We found that about 15 percent of the children we studied with asthma had no drug insurance whatsoever, so they had to pay out of pocket, which can be very expensive, " says Ungar. " As a result, they didn't get all the medications they needed, or parents were making undesirable choices such as choosing an inhaler based on price rather than how useful it is for the child's asthma. " Ungar's 2001 study found that the direct costs on average for asthma treatment was $1,220 per child per year. For asthmatics under four, an age group who Ungar says need to use the healthcare system more, it costs about $1,400 per year. On top of that there are indirect costs, such as when a parent has to miss work to care for their child. " Now there are more children with asthma, and that means that the overall economic burden on the entire population is greater. Certainly this is an increasing burden on the healthcare system, " says Ungar. The CEC report, which included the U.S. and Mexico as well as Canada, said that while rates of lead contamination and water- related illnesses have declined in recent years, asthma is now much more prevalent in all three countries. An estimated 2.5 million Canadians affected by the condition, including 12 percent of children and eight percent of adults. Outdoor air that is polluted with particulate matter, ground level ozone, carbon monoxide and lead, among others, is the main offender for asthmatics. The report recommends better efforts on the part of governments, parents, schools and workplaces to reduce pollutants and improve air quality. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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