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Transcript
CHAPTER
9
Environmental Health
The Rise and Fall—and
Rise?—of DDT
• DDT is the least expensive way of killing the mosquitoes
that cause malaria.
• DDT harms fish and birds, and can cause liver damage,
cancer, and convulsions in humans.
• In the 1970s many countries banned the use of DDT, but
some African countries have resumed its use to control
malaria.
Talk About It Evidence shows that DDT damages
ecosystems but helps eradicate malaria in areas
where millions of people die of the disease each
year. Should DDT be used in malaria-stricken areas?
Why or why not?
Lesson 9.2 Biological and Social Hazards
Three quarters of infectious disease deaths
are caused by five types of diseases:
respiratory infections, AIDS, diarrheal
diseases, tuberculosis, and malaria.
Tuberculosis-causing
bacteria
Lesson 9.2 Biological and Social Hazards
Infectious Diseases
• Caused by pathogens
• Spread by human and animal
contact and through contaminated
food and water
• Cause of almost half of all deaths
in developing nations
• Covering your mouth when you
cough, washing your hands often,
and staying home from school if
you’re sick help prevent the
spread of infectious disease.
Did You Know? In 2002, AIDS killed
about 2 million people worldwide—
almost equal to the entire population
of Arkansas.
Lesson 9.2 Biological and Social Hazards
Emerging Diseases
• Diseases appearing in the human population for the first time
or suddenly beginning to spread rapidly
• Humans have little or no resistance, and no vaccines have
been developed.
• Facilitated by
increasing human
mobility, growing
antibiotic
resistance, and
environmental
changes
Lesson 9.2 Biological and Social Hazards
Responding to Emerging Diseases
• World Health Organization (WHO):
Monitors health events worldwide and
coordinates international responses to
emerging diseases
• Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC): Responds to
emerging diseases in the United States;
the CDC developed pandemic plans to
deal with the spread of the H1N1 flu virus.
H1N1 Virus
Lesson 9.2 Biological and Social Hazards
Social Hazards
• Some social hazards are
easier to avoid than others.
• Examples of social hazards
include smoking, being
exposed to secondhand
smoke, living near an old
toxic waste site, working
with harmful chemicals, and
eating fatty foods.