top of page

Children’s environmental health indicators (CEHIs)


Oct 14m 2010

Source: NIH

National Library of Medicine

National Center for Biotechnology Information

Photo Source: Unsplash


Table 4.

Children’s environmental health indicators (CEHIs) for major morbidity and mortality causes, selected for relation to climate change adaptation.

MEME model category

Perinatal diseases

Respiratory diseases

Diarrheal diseases

Physical injury

Insect-borne diseases

Contexts

------------------------------------ Children 0–14 years of age living in poverty ------------------------------------

Population growth rate in endemic disease areas


Exposures

Famine risk


People living in informal settlements


Malnourished women of childbearing age

Intrauterine growth retardation in newborns


Children 0–14 years of age in unsafe housing

Drinking-water supplies failing national water quality

People living in informal settlements

Total area of insect vector habitats


Children 0–14 years of age in households providing suitable conditions for insect-borne disease transmission

------------ Children 0–14 years of age living in disaster-affected areas ------------


Health outcomes

Intrauterine growth retardation in newborns

Morbidity rate for children 0–4 years of age due to acute respiratory illness

Diarrhea mortality and and morbidity in children 0–4 years of age

Mortality rate of children 0– 14 years of age due to physical illness

Prevalence of insect-borne diseases in children 0–14 years of age


Actions

Attributable change in number of households lacking basic services

Attributable change in number of households relying on biomass fuels or coal as the main source of heating and cooking

Attributable number of food outlets failing food hygiene standards

Children 0–14 years of age living within reach of specialist emergency medical services

At-risk children 0–14 years of age covered by effective, integrated vector control and management systems

MEME, multiple exposures and multiple effects. Adapted from WHO (2009a).





Share the wealth of health with your colleagues and friends by sharing this article with 3 people today.


If this article was helpful to you, donate to the Shidonna Raven Garden and Cook E-Magazine Today. Thank you in advance.




Comments

Rated 0 out of 5 stars.
No ratings yet

Add a rating
  • YouTube
  • Pinterest
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest

Shidonna Raven (TM)
Copyright - All Rights Reserved
Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page