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A Blog to increase public knowledge about environmental health by sharing our concerns and our work as well as information you can use in your daily life.

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Selected Category: Environmental Hazards and Health Effects

Stay Safe and Healthy in Winter

Categories: Emergency Preparedness, Environmental Hazards and Health Effects, National Center for Environmental Health

Although some parts of the country are warming up already, winter is not “officially” over until March 20. So stay ready for winter hazards. You will be more likely to remain safe and healthy if you are prepared.

Indoor Safety

You may prefer to remain indoors in the winter as much as possible, but staying inside is no guarantee of safety. Take these steps to keep your home safe and warm even if you lose power.

Cookstove Alliance

Categories: Environmental Hazards and Health Effects, From the Director, National Center for Environmental Health

Woman cooking in India

Woman cooking in India

For many Americans, the most pressing concern about stoves is whether they are made of stainless steel. But more than 3 billion people in the world have more serious worries. They still cook the way their ancestors did—over an open fire or on a crude stove that creates indoor air pollution that can cause chronic lung diseases and severe pneumonia.

Indoor air pollution from these stoves is in the top 5 most significant threats to health in developing nations. In fact, the World Health Organization estimates that exposure to smoke from these stoves kills more than 1.5 million people each year. Not surprisingly, women and young children are at the highest risk.To support the effort toward reducing these health threats, CDC joined the Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves as a founding member in 2010.

Earth Day: What is Environmental Public Health?

Categories: Environmental Hazards and Health Effects, From the Director, National Center for Environmental Health

Earth

April 22 marks the 42nd anniversary of Earth Day, begun in 1970 and celebrated around the world. Earth Day reminds us of our personal and collective responsibility to preserve and protect our environment. 

Scientists and public health professionals at CDC’s National Center for Environmental Health (NCEH) and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) focus on the ways to improve our environment and save lives. Every year, we initiate our celebration by observing National Environmental Education Week during the week leading up to Earth Day.

 
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