Water and Health in an Overcrowded World
illuminates the ways in which urban and rural
environments and living conditions affect human health,
disease and disability in contrasting populations around
the world. It looks widely, setting the health
experience of contemporary societies in a rapidly
urbanising world in the context of human evolutionary
history and human biology. The great majority of humans
now live in an environment which is very different from
that in which we evolved. We are still subject to the
age-old selection pressures of infectious disease and
interpersonal violence, but living in an overcrowded
'human zoo' is generating unprecedented sources of human
disease and disability, such as pollution, traffic
accidents, obesity, alcohol, tobacco and stress. An
interactive DVD program models the evolution of one new
threat: antibiotic resistant bacteria. The human zoo
offers many benefits, but the costs to human health and
happiness are considerable, as a review of some key
global health statistic illustrates. The book concludes
with a detailed case study of a scarce resource which is
vital for human health: clean water.It considers the
global water cycle, the uneven distribution and use of
water between regions, and the impact of population
growth, development and climate change on freshwater
resources. More than a billion people worldwide are at
risk from polluted drinking water and two and a half
billion lack even the most basic sanitation. The
consequences are illustrated by a discussion of
water-borne diseases such as cholera, which cause
millions of deaths every year. An interactive DVD using
chemical models, video clips and photographs presents
the chemistry of water at the molecular level and
explains how compounds such as nitrates from fertilisers
dissolve in it. This leads to an examination of water
pollution by chemicals of human origin, including
nitrates, mercury and endocrine disruptors. The authors
conclude that the Earth's expanding human population is
in a rapidly accelerating competition for water for
irrigation, drinking and industrial processes, which
threatens both human health and the preservation of
biodiversity.The Online Resource Centre features: For
lecturers who are registered adopters of the book: -
Figures from the book in electronic format, available to
download For students: Access to ROUTES, a searchable
internet database of online resources compiled by
academic staff and subject-specialist librarians.
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