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TOPIC: Health Asia
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linsi (Moderator)
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Health Asia 1 Year, 1 Month ago
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Asia Braces for Sharp Cancer Rise
SINGAPORE) —Asia is bracing for a dramatic surge in cancer rates over the next decade as people in the developing world live longer and adopt bad Western habits that greatly increase the risk of the disease.
Smoking, drinking and eating unhealthy foods — all linked to various cancers — will combine with larger populations and fewer deaths from infectious diseases to drive Asian cancer rates up 60 percent by 2020, some experts predict.
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1626477,00.html

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linsi (Moderator)
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Posts: 998
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Re:Health Asia 1 Year, 1 Month ago
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NEPAL: Impoverished urban squatters face high risk of poor health
KATHMANDU, 23 May 2007 (IRIN) - The growing population of the Nepali capital, Kathmandu, has exacerbated the plight of the city’s estimated 50,000 squatters who are among the poorest people in Nepal, according to a study by local non-governmental organisation (NGO) Water Aid Nepal.
The major problems faced by the city’s poor are a limited supply of clean drinking water, and poor sanitation, health and hygiene, according to local NGO Lumanti.
In addition, urbanisation has contributed to making the already contaminated water of Bagmati River worse. The government has failed to manage a proper sewerage system in the city, according to Lumanti. Squatters are the most affected as they all live on land close to the river, the only available space for them.
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=72319
again like any other impoverished asian nation, the government has the major role to aleviate such conditions
but poverty still is on the rise
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linsi (Moderator)
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Re:Health Asia 1 Year, 1 Month ago
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labourers exposure to raw opium pushes them towards drug addiction-
Health risks
Back on the poppy fields, lancing-and-robbing is an arduous task, which requires a poppy field labourer to work half-bowed for hours. Many labourers complain about lumbago and pain in the legs.
Moreover, extensive exposure to raw opium pushes many labourers towards drug addiction, Afghanistan’s Ministry of Counter Narcotics (MCN) has found.
Some labourers use their fingers, instead of a flat razor, to collect raw opiates. It is common for harvesters to lick their fingers, a spokesman for MCN said.
Labourers also inhale a strong opiate odour during working hours which exacerbates their vulnerability to drug addiction. “I always feel dizzy while I work in the field,” a labourer admitted. Another worker said he started using opium regularly after he first worked on poppy fields for over a month in 2006.
It is unclear whether all poppy labourers realise the risks they are taking in their job, but Ravan from UNODC says: “If they had alternative opportunities, I don’t think they would do this intensive and risky job.”
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=72263

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linsi (Moderator)
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Re:Health Asia 11 Months, 2 Weeks ago
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BETGARI, Bangladesh: In the golden haze of dawn, Mohammed Salim Sheikh walked slowly through the paddies, so frail and thin that the skirtlike lungi wrapped around his waist looked like a clown's oversize trousers.
Carrying a treatment chart in one hand and a stainless steel water glass in the other, he crossed the threshold of a house. The homemaker inside, Zahida Khatun Jharna, rose from her cooking fire, fetched his medication and filled his water glass. Then she ticked off his chart for the day and sent him home.
The routine plays out in countless villages across Bangladesh every morning, and it represents a remarkably simple but apparently effective effort to tackle a stubborn and deadly epidemic: tuberculosis, a scourge that kills 1.6 million people worldwide each year.
In a country plagued by years of corrupt and sluggish governance, Bangladesh has come up with a novel innovation to curb the disease.....
They conduct daily household surveys in their neighborhoods, hunt for patients like Sheikh who have been coughing for more than three weeks - a standard measure of detecting potential patients - coax them to get tested and, most important, administer a long and rigorous treatment.
[b]A Bangladeshi army of housewives battles tuberculosis [/b]

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