ArabicChineseEnglishFrenchRussianSpanish
WHO home
All WHO This site only
 

Children's environmental health

  WHO > Programmes and projects > Children's environmental health

Children's environmental health

3rd International WHO Conference on Environmental Threats to the Health of Children

This conference, hosted by the Ministry of Environment in Korea in collaboration with the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare and Family Planning, and organized by the WHO jointly with national and international partners, is supported by many organizations involved on actions about preventing childhood diseases through healthy environments.

The event aims at extending the recognition of children's environmental health needs and providing a platform for the exchange of scientific experiences, for learning about research efforts, and promoting protectives policies.
It will also enable us to work out why existing global efforts have not progressed more rapidly and what needs to be done, both in developing and industrialized countries.

link to the Conference website

CEH home page banner

Children are our future, numbering over 2.3 billion worldwide (aged 0-19) and representing boundless potential. Child survival and development hinge on basic needs to support life; among these, a safe, healthy and clean environment is fundamental.

Children are exposed to serious health risks from environmental hazards. Over 40% of the global burden of disease attributed to environmental factors falls on children below five years of age, who account for only about 10% of the world's population. Environmental risk factors often act in concert, and their effects are exacerbated by adverse social and economic conditions, particularly conflict, poverty and malnutrition. There is new knowledge about the special susceptibility of children to environmental risks: action needs to be taken to allow them to grow up and develop in good health, and to contribute to economic and social development.

  • Each year, at least three million children under the age of five die due to environment-related diseases.
  • Acute respiratory infections annually kill an estimated two million children under the age of five. As much as 60 percent of acute respiratory infections worldwide are related to environmental conditions.
  • Diarrhoeal diseases claim the lives of nearly two million children every year. Eighty to 90 percent of these diarrhoea cases are related to environmental conditions, in particular, contaminated water and inadequate sanitation.
  • Nearly one million children under the age of five died of malaria in 1998. Up to 90 percent of malaria cases are attributed to environmental factors

Our work on children's environmental health is carried out in the following activity areas:

In addition, this web site provides access to a large number of publications, statistics, indicators, fact sheets on children's environmental health, as well as links to other related WHO and non-WHO sites.


NEWS

Children's Environmental Health Indicators (CEHI): Presenting Regional Successes, Learning for the Future
More information


Training modules available
More information

International CEHI Workshop: 10-11 April 2008
More information

The Health and Environment Lexicon
More information

CEH Profile Argentina
Full text

CEHI Newsletter
More information

The environment and health for children and their mothers
More information

Posters and maps
adapted from Inheriting the World: The Atlas of Children's Health and the Environment
Full text

Data review from international surveys
Full text


EVENTS

More information on current and past events

Contact us
More information


Statistics
More information

Publications
More information

Fact sheets
More information

Press releases
More information

Indicators to improve children's environmental health
Full text


LINKS

Healthy Environments for Children Alliance
More information

Child and Adolescent Health and Development
More information

Family and Community Health
More information

WHO Global Database on Child Growth and Malnutrition
More information

School Health and Youth Health Promotion
More information

Other links
More information