Public health (and individual health) depend on environmental health.
While many conditions—e.g., cancers, neurological diseases and disorders, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes—have genetic risk factors, and some can also be triggered or worsened by certain viruses or by lifestyle choices (diet and exercise), many diseases are much more likely to occur when certain environmental exposures (pollutants) are also present. Prevention of diseases should not just be focused on lifestyle choices, but should also focus on protecting everyone by banning the environmental toxins that many of us are exposed to.
Many known and probable/suspected carcinogens, endocrine disruptors (including “obesogens”), and neurotoxins are in products that we use every day, and we’re also regularly exposed to toxins through polluted air, water, and soil/food.
Industrial, agricultural, and janitorial workers, and people living in low-income (or Industrial Ag.) communities, often suffer the greatest exposures to toxins/pollutants (and therefore, people in these groups often have shorter lifespans). But all of us face these risks to some degree, no matter how “healthy” our lifestyle or how wealthy our neighborhood is. We should all be outraged that any one of us and many of our loved ones could end up suffering or dying from diseases or disorders that are often caused—at least in part—by our typically involuntary exposures to toxic chemicals that should not be manufactured or used or emitted into the environment. Our society and regulatory agencies should be using the precautionary principle and keeping harmful chemicals and toxins (including oil, gas, and coal emissions, and petrochemical plastics) out of our environment. We must push for changes that protect everyone’s bodies and brains.
Climate destabilization and global heating are also creating significant problems for public health (and safety and survival), in so many ways: from extreme heat to other climate-driven disasters (wildfires and smoke, flooding, drought, etc.), to the increased incidence and geographic spread of infectious (and mosquito-and tick-borne) diseases, as well as the very real mental health impacts of experiencing and witnessing climate destabilization, traumatizing disasters and displacement. Any time you’re working to mitigate and slow climate change, you’re also working to protect public health.
Here’s a list of our posts that are most directly related to health:
And these are some organizations that are focused on environmental and public health:
- IPEN (International Pollutants Elimination Network)
- Planetary Health Alliance
- Environmental Health News (EHN)
- Collaborative on Health and the Environment
- EWG (Environmental Working Group)
- Center for Environmental Health
- Toxic-Free Future
- Non Toxic Communities
- Safer Chemistry Impact Fund [NEW, 2024]
- ChemSec
- ChemForward
- Medical Society Consortium on Climate and Health
- Nurses Climate Challenge
- Physicians for Social Responsibility
- Science and Environmental Health Network (SEHN)
- Environmental Health Sciences
- Children’s Environmental Health Network (CEHN)
- Health Care Without Harm
- Beyond Pesticides
- Pesticide Action Network of North America (PANNA)
- Beyond Plastics
- Health & Environmental Funders Network (HEFN)
- Silent Spring Institute
- Program on Reproductive Health and the Environment (PRHE)
- Climate Mental Health Network [Added in 2024]
- Pure Earth
- Healthy Building Network (HBN)
- Greenguard product certification
- MADE SAFE product certification
- WELL building certification
- Project Lyme
{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }
Great article! It’s important for everyone to be aware of the potential impacts of environmental factors on our health and take steps to protect ourselves.