This information comes from Asthma Society of Canada
"Doctors
define asthma as a "chronic inflammatory disease of the airways" . It is
one of the most prevalent chronic conditions affecting Canadians.
Asthma can be diagnosed at any age, but often starts in childhood. Its
prevalence in Canada has been increasing over the last 20 years and it
is estimated that currently over 3 million Canadians have asthma.
"The
three strongest risk factors for developing asthma are family history,
exposure in infancy to high levels of antigens such as house dust mites,
and exposure to tobacco smoke and/or chemical irritants.
"We're
all pretty familiar with allergic triggers of asthmatic symptoms, such
as mould, animal dander, pollen, dust mites, etc., but perhaps less
familiar with non-allergic triggers such as certain drugs, chemicals,
fumes and odours, respiratory viral infections, certain weather
conditions, strenuous physical exercise, tobacco smoke, and air
pollution.
"Urbanization appears to be correlated with an
increase in asthma. The nature of the risk is unclear because studies
have not taken into account indoor allergens although these have been
identified as significant risk factors.
"Experts are struggling to understand why prevalence rates world-wide are, on average, rising by 50% every decade."
At
first reading, there isn't much extremely shocking in this report. But
with a little research, in my opinion it becomes alarming.
First
of all, the report was updated in April of 2005, yet most of the
footnoted references are from the mid to late 90's. So the report is
about "Canadians" in general; children are still not identified as a
unique segment of the population, their needs, habits and
susceptibilities are not taken into special consideration, even though
the studies all concur that asthma often starts in childhood.
Next,
approximately 3 million Canadians have asthma. You have to put that
into the context of how many Canadians there are, which in the year 2000
was about 31 million, with an annual growth rate of approximately 1%.
So about 9.6% of all Canadians have asthma. Almost one out of 10. If one
out of 10 Canadians were in a wheelchair, or wearing a cast, we would
take notice. Alarming, since we treat it so casually. It's a chronic
disease, which means lifelong constant management and medication.<
The world's current (overall as well as natural) growth rate is
about 1.3% per year, while prevalence rates of asthma world-wide are, on
average, rising by 50% every decade. So asthma is occuring over 3 times
more than can be accounted for by population growth. These are rough
figures, just to give us an idea of what we're looking at.
And this is only about asthma. It isn't about illness from chemical poisoning, or deaths from poisoning, or lung cancer, or...
So
it's time to take steps to prevent asthma and other illnesses and
diseases. At the very least, search for and buy the least toxic
cleansers for household use. Get educated! Then, store all chemicals
safely and securely away from children and pets.
Don't allow
smoking in your home, and be aware of and avoid air pollution, both
inside and out. Air out your home completely three times a day. Did you
know that cigarette smoke contains about 4,000 chemical agents,
including over 60 carcinogens? The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), the National Institute of Environmental Health Science's National
Toxicology Program, and the World Health Organization's International
Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) have all classified secondhand
smoke as a known human carcinogen-a category reserved for agents for
which there is sufficient scientific evidence that they cause cancer.
The
U.S. EPA has estimated that exposure to secondhand smoke causes about
3,000 lung cancer deaths among nonsmokers and is responsible for up to
300,000 cases of lower respiratory tract infections in children up to 18
months of age in the United States each year. If you have to smoke,
just dig your own grave, don't drag others with you!
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