Title: The Urban Environment Impacts on Health and Wellbeing
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2The Urban Environment Impacts on Health and
Wellbeing
- A successful urban area stimulates those who live
and work there and reinforces self-esteem. - The urban environment affect health and wellbeing
of everyone who lives and works there. - Many problems are concentrated in the most
deprived areas where environmental, social and
economic factors interact especially children and
older people. - Relationship between health, wellbeing and place
are complex interacting and poorly understood.
3Effects of Urban Environment on Health
- Air pollution 24,000 deaths/yr brought forward
by8 months and 24,000 hospital admissions. - Traffic accidents 3,300 deaths and 29,000
serious injuries/yr. - Climate Winter - 25,700 extra deaths Dec
2005-March 2006. - Summer - 2,000 excess deaths
in heat-wave of 2003. - Mental health Strong association between urban
residence and psychiatric disorders. - Infectious disease Spread of pandemic flue and
new diseases with climate change. - Obesity 34,000 extra deaths each year.
4The London Smog of December 1952
Clean Air Act of 1956
5AIR POLLUTION PARTICLES AND THE LUNG
- 1,000,000,000,000 particles enter into lungs
daily - 10,000 lts of air pass through the lungs every 24
hours. - Surface area exposed to the external environment
- 150 m2
6Tc99-Technigas lt100nm mmd
7Percentage Change in Health End-point for a
10mg/m3 Increase in PM10 (summarised from over
100 studies)
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3
Increase
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1
Adverse health effects of particles persist after
controlling for smoking
8Meta-analysis of TSP cardiovascular mortality
Anderson R et al
9Cardiovascular Mortality PM2.5 and Black
SmokeLong-term Exposure
PM2.5
Black Smoke
Relative risk of all cause mortality per 10
mg/m3 change in annual average PM2.5 1.06 (95
CI1.02-1.11)
10Cardiac Admissions PM10
11Asthma Bronchitis Associated with PM10
Influence of Closing and Reopening a Steel Mill
in Utah Valley
Pope, Am J Public Health 1989
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13Emission of nitrogen oxides, sulphur dioxide,
ammonia and non methyl VOC from anthrop0genic
sources by sector in the UK
14Traffic growth by mode for the period 1980-2003
15Proportion of diesel vehicles in car fleet
COUNTRY DIESEL CARS () Austria 54 Belgium 5
2.2 Spain 47.3 France 40.2 Italy 22.5 Ho
lland 20.3 Portugal 18.8 Germany 17.6 UK
15.3 Sweden 11.0 EUROPEAN MEAN 25.3
Forecast to increase to 50 by 2010
(DAmato et al, Clin Exp Allergy 2000 30
628-636)
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18Particulate Matter
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20Photochemical smogincluding OZONE
- NO2 radiation ? NO O
- O O2 ? O3
- RO2 O2 ? RO O3
Sunshine
Pollutants
21Ozone
22Percentage change in PM10 emissions in selected
European countries between 1990 and 2001
23Complex Interactions Influencing Individual Health
24The web of connections between increased car
ownership and use and environmental and social
outcomes in urban areas The Urban Environment
Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution March
2007
25Reccommendations that Directly Influence Health
- Reduce hot spots of air pollution in urban
settings.
26Schematic representation of population exposure
to air pollution and potential Impacts of air
quality management strategies
27Schematic representation of population exposure
to air pollution and potential Impacts of air
quality management strategies
28Reccommendations that Directly Influence Health
- Reduce hot spots of air pollution in urban
settings. - Promotion of overall air pollution reduction for
the whole population (Gap Closure).
29Schematic representation of population exposure
to air pollution and potential Impacts of air
quality management strategies
30Unravelling Environmental Factors Shaping Health
31What we must aspire to
32Reccommendations that Directly Influence Health
- Reduce hot spots of air pollution in urban
settings. - Promotion of overall air pollution reduction for
the whole population (Gap Closure). - Develop a statutory framework for Health Impact
Assessments as a component of Environment Impact
Assessment in urban planning.