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EOH3101 principles of environmental health

EOH3101 principles of environmental health. Introduction. Coordinator / Lecturer Dr. Shaharuddin Mohd Sham Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences Universiti Putra Malaysia Room no. : P1C11, blok Pensyarah Email: shaha@upm.edu.my

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EOH3101 principles of environmental health

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  1. EOH3101 principles of environmental health Introduction

  2. Coordinator / Lecturer Dr. ShaharuddinMohd Sham Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences Universiti Putra Malaysia Room no. : P1C11, blokPensyarah Email: shaha@upm.edu.my Fb: Din Sham

  3. MaksudKesihatanPersekitaran : Satuaspekkesihatanawam yang berkaitandenganbentuk-bentukkehidupan, bahan-bahan, kuasadankeadaandidalampersekitaranmanusia yang bolehmempengaruhikesihatandankesejahteraanmanusia (Purdom, 1971).

  4. Definition of Environmental Health Aspect of public health that is concerned with those forms of life, substances and forces and conditions in the surroundings of man that may exert an influence on man’s health and well-being (Purdom, 1971).

  5. Definasi Pertubuhan Kesihatan Sedunia (WHO) berkenaan Kesihatan Persekitaran Kawalan faktor-faktor di dalam alam fizikal manusia yang akan, atau boleh menyebabkan, akibat buruk ke atas perkembangan fizikal, kesihatan ataupun kemandirian manusia itu sendiri.

  6. World Health Organisation’s (WHO) definition of environmental health Environmental health is the control of all those factors in man’s physical environment which exercise, or may exercise, a deleterious effect on his physical development, health or survival.

  7. Antaraaspek-aspekdibawahbidangkesihatanpersekitaran • Vektorpenyakit 11. Penyakitkronik • Makanandanberjangkit • Air dan air buangan 12. Pengelakan • Udarakemalangan • Bahanbuanganpepejal • Radiasi ion • Kawalanpersekitaran • Persekitaranperumahan • Pelandanpengurusan • persekitaran • 10. Populasidunia

  8. Air pollution and haze

  9. Water bodies pollution

  10. Housing and development problems

  11. A(H1N1)

  12. Japanese Encephalitis (JE)

  13. Leptospirosis

  14. Bhopal Gas Tragedy, India

  15. A Section of male hornyheadturbot (small picture) testis showing the presence of a large developing egg (A) Endocrine disruptors

  16. Chernobyl disaster

  17. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill

  18. EMERGING AND RE-EMERGING DISEASES Emerging – diseases that have not occurred in humans before or that occurred only in small numbers in isolated areas. Re-emerging – diseases that once were major health problems globally or in a particular area, and then declined dramatically, but are again becoming health problems for a significant proportion of the population. Diseases thought to be adequately controlled making a “comeback” are “re-emerging”.

  19. EMERGING DISEASES MERS – Middle East Respiratory Syndrome In the same family of coronaviruses as SARS, which killed at least 775 people after it emerged in China in late 2002. MERS, which first appeared in Saudi Arabia in September, has been kicking around the Middle East for nearly a year, infecting at least 79 people. It causes fever, cough and shortness of breath, and so far it has been a killer — about half the confirmed cases so far have resulted in death. On July 9 the World Health Organization (WHO) convened an emergency meeting to determine whether the new coronavirus that causes MERS constitutes a public-health emergency of international concern.

  20. The good news is that a recent report published in the Lancetindicates that the virus has a relatively low level of infectiousness — less so than the measles and strong cases of the flu — which may limit its potential to ignite a global pandemic. A similar lack of infectiousness also kept SARS from becoming a lasting global menace, though the disease did cause nearly $50 billion in damages. But there’s no guarantee that MERS won’t mutate or worsen over time. And even if it doesn’t, there will always be new infectious diseases waiting to emerge.

  21. RE-EMERGING DISEASES Tuberculosis (TB) TUBERCULOSIS CASE DETECTION RATE (ALL FORMS) IN MALAYSIA (World Bank report, 2012)

  22. Other types of re-emerging diseases Malaria Schistosomiasis Any other examples you can give me?

  23. What can you do to save the human race from problems that you just saw? What will happen if the problems are not looked into or solved ASAP?

  24. Thank you for your attention !!

  25. Rujukan / References: • Purdom, P.W., 1971. Environmental Health. Academic Press, Inc., New York, USA. 584 pp. • 2. Odum, E.P., 1971. Fundamentals of Ecology. W.B. Saunders Company, USA. 574 pp. • 3. Noor Hassim, I., 1996. Kesihatan Persekitaran. Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka, Kuala Lumpur. 162 pp. • 4. Zailina, H. dan Jamal H. Hashim, 1997. Kesihatan Persekitaran : Prinsip dan Cabaran di Malaysia. Fakulti Perubatan dan Sains Kesihatan, Universiti Putra Malaysia. 156 pp. • 5. Homepej US Environmental Protection Agency www.epa.gov/

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