Published by: Megan Richards
Can Pollution Cause My Asthma?
A Brief Look Into the Effects Pollution
Has On the Asthma Sufferer.
(How to Live In a Dirty World)
We now know (and even
governments are beginning to admit it) pollution is growing daily and is a
key factor in the explosion of the number of asthmatics around the world.
There is practically no country that hasn't seen a rise in pollution levels
and the amount of asthma sufferers in the last twenty years. Whether it is
the black smoke coming out of car exhausts, large chemical plants or smoke
from cigarettes, people are feeling its effects on their health in an
increasingly alarming number.
Maybe what is the saddest and also the most frightening problem with asthma
is that children are particularly at risk. Their lungs are still growing and
as a result have to breathe faster than adults: they are more prone to smoke
and other pollutants found in the air. Children are also more susceptible to
developing asthma if they live in a smoke filled house or the area where
they live has a high smog count.
People who already have asthma have seen it getting worse in recent years.
More sufferers are finding themselves being treated in hospital when before
they could cope by themselves.
So what can we do you reduce pollution? Well short of being elected
president in your country and bringing in new laws to curb pollution
emissions, not too much. The first solution is to make your house smoke and
pollution free. If you smoke, quit. It may sound like an impossible task,
especially if you have been at it for many years, but ask your doctor to
give you some advice and you will be amazed at the treatments now available
to make it easier.
Don't let other people smoke in your house, either. If you really can't stop
smoking then find a place such as the garden, balcony or window and only
smoke there. By limiting the amount of places in the home containing
cigarette smoke you will go a long way to controlling your children's
asthma. Another very important cause of asthma is smog from vehicle
emissions. Use your car less: if you are going to the corner shop… walk! Buy
a bicycle; ask work colleagues if they would like to start a car pool with
you. It may seem like a grain of sand in an ocean but doing your bit will
eventually produce results.
Karon Beattie is a former asthma sufferer. She is the author of several
books which describes how she eliminated her own
asthma. Her books have helped many other sufferers World Wide do the
same.
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