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Children's Health

Sunday, July 09, 2006

SYMMES TOWNSHIP , OHIO – Immunization Clinic

SYMMES TOWNSHIP , OHIO – The Hamilton County Health District will hold its Immunization Clinic at the Symmes Township Administration building on Monday, July 24, 2006 from 1:00 to 4:00 PM.

For more information, please contact the Health District at 946-7800 or visit their website at www.hamiltoncountyhealth.org.

Saturday, July 01, 2006

LOVEAND, OHIO – SMOG SEASON AND YOUR CHILDREN'S HEALTH

LOVEAND, OHIO – So far this year the air in the Loveland area has been relatively clean, however air pollution levels are creeping into the dangerous levels. Levels that will damage the health of our children.

A recent study conducted by the American Lung Association shows, “As many as 27.1 million children age 13 and under, and over 1.9 million children with asthma are potentially exposed to unhealthful levels of ozone.”

“Air pollution, including ozone, can result in more frequent respiratory infections in children due to impairment of the lung's ability to defend itself,” according to the American Lung Association (ALA).

The Natural Resources Defense Council says that data gathered in variety of recent studies reveals, “that air pollutants are associated with a wide variety of adverse health effects in children, including:

  • increased death rates in very severe pollution episodes and increased mortality risks for those living in highly polluted areas,
  • increased risk of acute respiratory illness,
  • aggravation of asthma, increased respiratory symptoms, and increased sickness rates (as indicated by kindergarten and school absences), and
  • decreases in lung function.

Michael T. Kleinman, Ph.D. Is a Professor in the Department of Community and Environmental Medicine at the University of California, Irvine. He says, “In many health effects research studies, children are considered as if they were small adults. This is not really true. There are many differences between children and adults in the ways that they respond to air pollution. For example, children take in more air per unit body weight at a given level of exertion than do adults. When a child is exercising at maximum levels, such as during a soccer game or other sports event, they may take in 20 percent to 50 percent more air -- and more air pollution -- than would an adult in comparable activity.”

Kleinman  goes on to say, “Air pollution can change the cells in the lung by damaging those that are most susceptible. If the cells that are damaged are important in the development of new functional parts of the lung, then the lung may not achieve its full growth and function as a child matures to adulthood.”

The American Lung Association says, “Physically, children are more vulnerable to air pollution than adults because their respiratory defenses are not fully formed. Their airways are smaller, and more likely to become blocked when irritated. They breathe more rapidly, taking in more pollution per pound of body weight. Children also spend a lot of time outdoors. They play hard, and breathe hard. Finally, children generally do not acknowledge the effects of ozone exposure, even when they are experiencing significantly reduced breathing ability. So they are less likely than adults to protect themselves from further harm by reducing activity level or going inside.”

The Association recommends that parents need to keep track of air pollution levels. “If the air quality is unhealthy, try to limit the amount of time your child spends outdoors in vigorous play. Plan the most strenuous activities for the early morning hours, before ozone levels climb. Keep all outdoor activities as far as possible from busy roadways and other sources of pollution.”

“Make sure your child's coaches and camp directors are aware of the health risks of air pollution, and have policies in place to protect the kids when air quality is unhealthy. If your child has asthma, it is important that these care-givers know he or she is especially vulnerable on high ozone days.”

And they also recommend that adults speak out in support of clean air. “Community leaders need to hear from people who are concerned about the toll air pollution is taking on the health of our children.”

PARTICULATES
“Particulate matter is the generic term used for a type of air pollution that consists of complex and varying mixtures of particles suspended in the air we breathe. Particles are present everywhere, but high concentrations and/or specific types of particles have been found to present a serious danger to human health, “ according to Lung Association.

“Particles of special concern to the protection of lung health are those known as fine particles, less than 2.5 microns in diameter. (For comparison, a human hair is about 75 microns in diameter.) Fine particles are easily inhaled deeply into the lungs where they can be absorbed into the bloodstream or remain embedded for long periods of time. A recent study showed a 17% increase in mortality risk in areas with higher concentrations of small particles.”

AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS
In a policy statement entitled, Ambient Air Pollution: Health Hazards to Children the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), “advises that not only can outdoor air pollution exacerbate asthma in some children, but recent studies have found that pollution has the potential to negatively affect lung growth and function, and to increase cases of respiratory tract illness, preterm birth and infant mortality.”

LOVELAND, OHIO – DIRTY AIR SEASON BEGINS WITH NEW LINKS ON LOVELAND MAGAZINE

Air_quality_nowLOVELAND, OHIO – Loveland Magazine looks at several government web sites daily to monitor past, current and predicted air quality data. The Loveland area is full bore into the dirty and unhealthy air season and both ozone and particulate data is looked at to provide readers with current information to protect their own as well as their children's health.

Loveland Magazine may be the only news publication in the tri-state that provides this information. For instance, the Cincinnati Enquirer provides air pollution information, but it is information that is collected at 2 PM the previous day. This information is faulty on two fronts. Number one is that the information is a day old, so although it may be helpful to know why your children were wheezing and lethargic the day before, you really need information so you can protect them in the first place. Number two; data from 2 o'clock in the afternoon is almost without exception a very distorted report of air quality, as the dirtiest air is almost always later in the afternoon and early evening.

The Enquirer, by providing data a day late, and data from when ozone is only beginning to “cook” in the air over the area, distorts by an enormous magnitude the true picture of just how dangerous our summer air can be for our children. There were many days last summer that if all you had to go by was the Cincinnati Enquirer you would not have known how dirty and dangerous the air can be.

If you watch TV Weather you sometimes get warnings of “Smog Alerts” but of course you have to be tuned to the TV during the weather broadcast and often the air quality reaches dangerous levels before the smog alerts are issued by the Hamilton County Department of Environmental Services; an agency that has been mandated by the Federal government to monitor our air, but seems reluctant to let the public know the true picture of just how dangerous the air is in the area.

Of course the wise can also just look outside and see the brown sky on many of these days. Not all of the pollution is visible however, and that is why the animated air quality map and other data found at Loveland Magazine will tell you the most accurate and up-to-date story.

The American Lung Association recommends that you, “Keep track of air pollution levels. If the air quality is unhealthy, try to limit the amount of time your child spends outdoors in vigorous play.”

Beginning today, Loveland Magazine will be providing a link to the current air quality conditions directly from several government web sites. The data is not easy to come by and the links to the government sites do not always work, so in a sense this is an experiment, but one worth undertaking so readers can have this information immediately available.

And, as was done last summer, Loveland Magazine will provide information directly on the front page when conditions are, or will be, particularly dangerous.

HOW TO USE THE LINKS

  • In using these links you will discover that clicking on the “Air Quality Now” icon you will go to a web page that gives you: the current conditions, that day's forecast, and the next day's forecast.
  • By clicking the “Animated Real Time Map” link you will go to a site and be able to watch as plumes of air pollution grow over the State Of Ohio, and Hamilton, Clermont, and Warren Counties. At this link you will also be able to follow other links to see the animation for the previous days.
  • By clicking on the link titled "National Air Quality Forecast” you will be taken to a site where you can view animations for other areas around the country.

WASHINGTON, DC - EPA STAFF REVOLTS

WASHINGTON, DC - Nine thousand EPA scientists have submitted a strongly worded letter to the EPA's Administrator, Stephen Johnson, protesting that "industry pressure" is compromising the "integrity of the science upon which agency decisions are based." The scientists are calling for a ban on pesticides known to be highly toxic. Research indicates that several dozen widely sprayed organophosphate pesticides, similar in composition to bio-warfare nerve gases, pose serious health threats, especially to children.
                      Learn more and Take Action: http://organicconsumers.org/epa7.htm

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