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Medicine LibreTexts

13: Environmental Health

  • Page ID
    11775
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    Environmental health is the branch of public health that is concerned with all aspects of the natural and built environment that may affect human health. Health is the science, practice, and study of a human's well-being and their health and preventing illnesses and human injuries. Other terms referring to or concerning environmental health are environmental public health, and public health protection/environmental health protection.

    • 13.1: Intro to Environmental Health
      This page discusses environmental health, emphasizing the impact of natural and built environments on human health. It addresses illness prevention related to factors like water and air quality. The natural environment includes elements unaffected by humans, while the built environment encompasses human-altered spaces.
    • 13.2: Overpopulation
      This page discusses human overpopulation, defining it as a situation where a population's ecological footprint surpasses its carrying capacity. Key factors include higher birth rates, lower mortality, migration, and resource depletion. Overpopulation can affect even sparsely populated areas without sustainability. Advocates emphasize the importance of population moderation for quality of life and carrying capacity, warning of starvation risks.
    • 13.3: Air Pollution
      This page discusses air pollution, highlighting its harmful effects on health and the environment, with both human activities and natural processes contributing. It notes the severe global issues of indoor and urban air quality, linked to approximately 7 million deaths in 2012. The Air Quality Index (AQI) measures pollution levels, while indoor air quality (IAQ) addresses building air quality challenges, especially in developing countries due to biomass burning, which leads to millions of deaths.
    • 13.4: Climate Change
      This page discusses climate change as long-term weather pattern alterations caused by natural factors and human activities, particularly greenhouse gas emissions. It highlights global warming as a major consequence, primarily driven by human actions, leading to rising temperatures, sea levels, and severe weather events. These changes threaten food security and habitability.
    • 13.5: Water
      This page discusses drought as a chronic natural phenomenon influenced by factors such as regional water capacity, economic status, and governance. Human activities can worsen drought conditions, and while it progresses slowly, it requires serious attention. Solutions like water recycling and gray water systems are suggested to conserve freshwater, a limited resource, though implementing these solutions involves substantial infrastructure investment.
    • 13.6: Waste Management
      This page discusses waste management, detailing processes from creation to disposal and emphasizing the importance of reducing health and environmental impacts. It highlights the waste hierarchy, prioritizing reduction, reuse, and recycling. Additionally, it addresses the adverse effects of noise pollution from machinery and transportation, which can harm human and animal health, and suggests urban planning as a strategy to mitigate these issues.

    Thumbnail: Runoff of soil and fertilizer during a rain storm. (Public Domain; Natural Resources Conservation Service, part of the United States Department of Agriculture).


    This page titled 13: Environmental Health is shared under a CC BY license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Garrett Rieck & Justin Lundin.