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Budapest, 24 June 2004
Our large-scale experiment with children's health and the need for
close monitoring
Professor Jacqueline
McGlade
Executive Director, European Environment Agency
Address to World Health
Organisation Fourth European Ministerial Conference on Environment and
Health
Budapest, 24 June 2004
Mr Chairman, Ministers, Ladies and Gentlemen,
The environments of our children - their air, water, food, consumer products and habitats - are contaminated with cocktails of low levels of gases and particles from fossil fuel combustion, largely untested chemicals and other environmental stressors, such as noise, damp, microbes, and tobacco smoke.
We are happy to enjoy the benefits from the economic activities that create these pollutants, but we are only just beginning to find out what this large-scale experiment with children's health is actually doing to them. We do not even really know what the economic and social benefits would be if much of this pollution were removed through better implementation of existing measures or more innovative and integrated policies.
If our children knew how much we do not know about this large-scale experiment they would be shocked - and if we told them what we do know they would perhaps be even more shocked.
For the four priority diseases that the European Action Plan on environment and health is focusing on:
But does reducing environmental pollution improve public health? Policy effectiveness knowledge is very scarce but we do know that there is a link.
For example:
Overall, reducing environmental pollutants and stressors could lead to reductions in perhaps 5-20% of environmentally induced deaths, diseases and disabilities in Europe's children, with significant savings to future health and education budgets.
The overall economic benefits of these actions on environmental pollutants are large but not quantified, at least for the EU. In the USA it has been estimated that $40 billion of savings a year can be achieved from taking lead out of children's environments.
But how do we begin to fill the information gaps that constrain our ability to act in reducing environmental pollution?
Let us recall what kinds of data and information have helped us in the past:
From these examples we can see that identifying and responding to early warnings of health hazards requires many different players, including the public and research scientists, and many different sources of information and knowledge, integrated in ways which bring out the complex linkages between our children's environments and their health.
Much can be gained from existing sources, often collected for other purposes. But now, new, coordinated and shared information needs to be generated to fill the large gaps in knowledge. For example, only 14% of large volume chemicals have sufficient publicly available data to do a minimal risk assessment, and that only for exposure to one substance at a time.
Such information systems provide major benefits by:
So what should the role of the EEA, in partnership with countries, the European Commission, WHO and others, be over the next five years?
We have two main priorities:
- To promote the collection of integrated environmental exposure data
via better balanced and co-ordinated monitoring and modelling of
environmental media; and
- To turn scattered data into a reliable information service. This will
be done by formulating relevant environment and health indicators and
assessments as well as by presenting information on the scales needed
by different users. These scales range from the "backyard" of a
national minister - in other words, the whole country - down to the
local neighbourhood of citizens who want to know more about the
environment in which they live.
Many elements of such an information service are already in place, although mostly at country level. But even more needs to be done if we want to look our children in the eye and say that our ongoing large-scale experiment is not damaging to their health.
The Agency will be extending its geo-referenced information service in partnership with our member countries, WHO, academics and NGOs over the next 12 months to meet the growing demand for regional and local information about health and the environment, whilst not increasing the burden of reporting.
For references, please go to https://eea.europa.eu./media/speeches/24-06-2004 or scan the QR code.
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