Climate, environment and health

TOPIC

Climate, environment and health

Climate, environment and health

The World Health Organization (WHO) defines health as a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being. The concept of environment has also evolved and, today, indicates the network of relationships between living communities, including man, and the physical environment, making the binomial environment / health inseparable.

The environment, pollution and changes in the climate all play a priority role in the well-being and health of populations. WHO estimates that 1 in 4 deaths worldwide are attributable to environmental factors that contribute to a wide spectrum of diseases and infirmities with greater effects on vulnerable sections of the population, specifically children and the elderly. The global strategy for health, the environment and climate change provides for a convergent and multisectoral approach in order to ensure safe and accessible environments according to principles of equity and sustainability.

The Istituto Superiore di Sanità (ISS, the National Institute of Health in Italy) is at the forefront of identifying and promoting adequate strategies to prevent the risk of diseases due to environmental factors and to transfer scientific evidence into public health programs and policies. The activities carried out in this area concern the quality of water, soil, air and indoor environments, waste management, the effects of emerging pollutants and climate change on ecosystems, human exposure to environmental agents and their toxicity mechanisms, and the health effects of exposure to environmental risk factors. Research activities converge towards an integrated evaluation approach that includes the physical, social, economic, ecological and cultural environment of the territorial context in order to promote human health and environmental sustainability according to the integrated objectives of the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.



Back 10 pratici consigli per ridurre l’esposizione a plastificanti per bambini e adulti

Gli ftalati, ad esempio Di-2-etilesilftalato (DEHP), e Bisfenolo A (BPA) sono sostanze contenute in oggetti di plastica di uso comune, eliminate rapidamente dall’organismo ma a cui tutti, bambini e adulti, siamo esposti come ha evidenziato lo studio di biomonitoraggio del progetto Life Persuaded "Biomonitoraggio di ftalati e bisfenolo a in coppie madre-bambino italiane: associazione tra esposizione e patologie infantili" (https://lifp.iss.it/?cat=9).

Life Persuaded ha misurato i livelli nelle urine di DEHP e di BPA nei bambini dai 4 ai 14 anni e nelle loro madri e ha valutato alcuni aspetti dello stile di vita e delle abitudini alimentari delle persone arruolate nello studio attraverso un questionario ad hoc.

Dalla valutazione delle risposte fornite in relazione ai livelli di esposizione misurati, il progetto è in grado di indicare quali modifiche ognuno di noi può apportare al proprio stile di vita per limitare l’esposizione a queste sostanze, con benefici per la propria salute e quella dell’ambiente.


Dipartimenti/Centri/Servizi

Centres Center of reference for gender medicine

Target

Healthcare professional Information specialist

Content type

Document Infographic

Topics

Gender and health Gender-specific toxicology Nutrition and food safety Chemical and toxicological food safety Climate, environment and health Chemical and biological contaminants Prevention and health promotion Lifestyles Diet Women's, children's and adolescents' health Child health and environment pollution Salute dell'adolescente Chemical substances and health protection Advice to the consumer