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Many risk long-term damage from SE
Asia haze: experts
Hong Kong -
From asthma attacks and sore throats to scarring and abnormal
development of lungs in children, Southeast Asia's annual haze is a
health menace that affects millions of people and costs regional
economies dearly.
Apart from fuelling a surge in work
absenteeism and medical costs, choking smoke from Indonesia's forest
and peat bog fires since mid-Aug has scared off tourists and hurt
airlines, hotels and shop owners in Singapore, Malaysia, Brunei and
Indonesia.
This year's haze was among the worst
in the past decade and health experts say the effects of repeated
exposure grow over time, and can even stunt lung growth in children.
"At levels of pollution much lower
than what we are talking about here, young people in the most
formative stage of their development experience stunting of lung
growth," Anthony Hedley, professor of community medicine at University
of Hong Kong said.
"I think that is a very likely
outcome of these repeated intermediate to long-term exposures of the
populations in Indonesia, Malaysia (and Singapore)," he told Reuters.
The fires, lit deliberately by
farmers and plantation owners on the Indonesian islands of Sumatra and
large parts of Borneo to clear land, emit particulates, sulphur
dioxide, carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide and ozone, all of which can
injure the heart and lungs.
This year's haze brought air
pollution indices to worryingly high levels and forced many to stay
indoors.
In Singapore, the government has
advised people to avoid strenuous activities outdoors and to stay
inside air-conditioned environments. Complaints of asthma and lung,
throat and heart-related illnesses rose to nearly 15,000 in the first
week of October, 600 more than in the same period a month earlier.
The region has not seen such a
prolonged period of high pollution since the haze of 1997-98, and
fires are still burning in southern Sumatra and parts of Kalimantan,
although the air in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur has cleared in the past
week.
Street sweeper Mohammad Soleh in
Palembang in south Sumatra complained: "I can only work for three
hours instead of the normal six hours. Even if I have a new mask every
day, it doesn't help. I have to cover my face with a shirt."
"Even that can only last for an hour.
After than I have to take a rest to catch my breath and soak my face.
In parts of Kalimantan, where the
haze remains thick, children went back to school on Wednesday wearing
surgical masks after a long break to celebrate the end of Ramadan.
In 1997-98, the haze blanketed a vast
area, including southern Thailand, and cost the region billions of
dollars in medical costs and damage to the tourism industry. The fires
burned for months in part because of a severe drought caused by El
Nino.
Every year since, the haze has
returned in varying levels of severity, causing acute eye and skin
irritations, upper and lower respiratory symptoms, coughing and
wheezing.
Young children, the elderly and those
with pre-existing heart and lung problems suffer most, experts said.
Mazrura
Sahani, environmental health expert at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia,
studied death records from 1996-2000 in Malaysia's heavily populated
Klang Valley and found that deaths from respiratory problems rose by
1.1 percent for very tiny increases in air pollution of the sort
produced by haze.
The smoke throws dangerously small
particles into the atmosphere. Measuring less than 10 micrometers in
diameter, or PM 10, more than 1,000 of these particulates can fit on a
pin-head and can seep into lung tissue.
"My study has shown that during the
haze, the most prominent pollutants are the PM 10, which are also
among the most dangerous because it goes into our lungs," she said.
Hedley said forest fires throw out "ultrafine"
particles smaller than 0.1 of a micrometer that even masks cannot keep
out.
David Hui, head of respiratory
medicine at the Chinese University in Hong Kong, said particulates of
less than 5 micrometers can penetrate deep into the lower respiratory
tract.
"It can cause inflammation in the
lungs and small airways and result in scarring and prevent normal
development of lung functions," Hui told Reuters. --
Reuters Limited
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