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1.
Gig Sanit ; (5): 30-4, 2012.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23243714

ABSTRACT

New biomarkers of effect of some controlled ambient air pollutants (formaldehyde, carbon monoxide and TSP) were found in two surveys of Moscow residents (apparently healthy and outpatients with allergic diseases) with a help of screening system of biochemical and immunological parameters. Possible mechanisms of the effects, including interference of atmospheric carbon monoxide and sulfur dioxide with corresponding endogenous second messengers, are discussed.


Subject(s)
Biomarkers/analysis , Environmental Illness/epidemiology , Immunity , Particulate Matter/adverse effects , Population Surveillance/methods , Public Health , Urban Population , Adult , Environmental Health , Environmental Illness/diagnosis , Environmental Illness/metabolism , Female , Humans , Incidence , Male , Middle Aged , Moscow/epidemiology , Retrospective Studies , Young Adult
2.
Gig Sanit ; (6): 41-3, 2009.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20135864

ABSTRACT

Ambient air pollution by suspended matter is an environmental factor that has the greatest influence on the health status of the majority of the Russian Federation's population. There is extensive epidemiological and clinical evidence suggesting that ambient air pollution by suspended matter and its fine-dispersed fractions PM10 and PM2.5 in particular, poses a serious threat to human health. The existing Russian single and average daily maximum permissible concentrations of suspended matter are not a high risk from this type of ambient air pollution and fail to assess human health damage in full measure. To reduce the concentrations of suspended matter and their action on man is currently the worldwide priority task whose performance will save much money. There is a need to change an air pollution monitoring system (continuous monitoring of fine suspended matter of PM10 and PM2.5), as well as to substantiate and introduce Russian hygienic standards for fine suspended matter (PM10 and PM2.5).


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants/adverse effects , Environmental Health , Hygiene/standards , Particulate Matter/adverse effects , Risk Assessment/methods , Humans , Moscow , Risk Factors
3.
Gig Sanit ; (6): 64-6, 2009.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20143492

ABSTRACT

Environmental pollution has a negative impact on the health status of the population, on that of children in particular. In-depth developments of primary morbidity of childhood diseases of respiratory organs as a system that is mostly exposed to ambient air pollution have indicated that respiratory diseases, including their chronic forms, are more frequently notified in the children residing in the areas characterized by high levels of air pollution. Formaldehyde and nitric dioxide, i.e. the chemical compounds the concentrations of which exceed the hygienic normal values, make the greatest contribution to risk formation. In-depth analysis of morbidity rates in the children living in the areas along which the heavy-traffic motorways pass has demonstrated that chronic respiratory diseases are more frequently registered in these children than in those residing in the areas remote from the motorways. A role of social factors influencing the increase of the so-called alimentary-dependent diseases is shown.


Subject(s)
Child Welfare/trends , Environmental Illness/epidemiology , Health Status , Hygiene , Urban Population , Child , Environmental Illness/prevention & control , Humans , Incidence , Moscow/epidemiology
4.
Gig Sanit ; (6): 20-2, 2007.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18161184

ABSTRACT

As of 2006, the city's motor transport fleet amounted to as many as 3 million units that annually consume about 5 million tons of petrol. The use rate of all kinds of vehicles has increased, resulting in the growth of the proportion of ambient air pollutants discharged by motor transport, which surpasses the increase of the absolute size of the fleet. The contribution of traveling sources to ambient air pollution is growing steadily and it has been recently about 90% (1 million tons). Implementation of measures and developed managerial decisions, and ecological programs, improvement of Moscow town-planning measures, and environment-improving measures against motor vehicles have contributed to a reduction in chemical and physical burdens on the population. The characteristics of the capital's ambient air pollution have been recently observed to become stable and improve. There is stabilization in morbidity due to respiratory diseases in all population groups. The prevalence of chronic respiratory diseases in children is on the decrease, the increase rate was 1.4% versus 33.5% in the preceding period. Assessment of carcinogenic risk showed that ambient air pollution and drinking water contamination had a negative impact on the Moscow population.


Subject(s)
Air/standards , Motor Vehicles/statistics & numerical data , Urban Population , Vehicle Emissions , Air Pollution/adverse effects , Catchment Area, Health , Chronic Disease/epidemiology , Environmental Illness/epidemiology , Environmental Illness/etiology , Humans , Russia/epidemiology
5.
Gig Sanit ; (4): 11-3, 2006.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17078284

ABSTRACT

The Government of Moscow allocates substantial funds for the development of a sociohygienic monitoring (SGM) system and for the guidance of the population's health status monitoring in relation to environmental factors. The risk-assessing studies made jointly with the investigators of the A. N. Sysin Research Institute of Human Ecology and Environmental Hygiene, Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, make it possible to determine priorities in risk control and to introduce new technologies for controlling the public health associated with the influence of social and environmental factors.


Subject(s)
Health Promotion , Hygiene/standards , Research/standards , Social Support , Catchment Area, Health , Humans , Russia
6.
Gig Sanit ; (5): 92-4, 2006.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17087233

ABSTRACT

The paper presents some indices that characterize morbidity in the Moscow population, which suggest positive trends in the health status in all population groups. These include stabilization of overall morbidity rates; a down-increase in the incidence of respiratory diseases and bronchial asthma; a reduction in overall morbidity in infants of the first year of life, including a reduction in the incidence of life-threatening diseases (perinatal pathology and congenital malformations; a decrease in the incidence of alimentary diseases associated with social factors. The found positive changes reflect the efficiency of introduction of the sociohygienic monitoring (AHM) system. One of the mechanisms of introduction of AHM results is to submit data to the Moscow Government in the annual reports "On the Moscow population's health status" which cover demography, morbidity, female health, and the regional features of the population's health in relation to environmental factors. Based on information, managerial decisions and measures to improve the sanitary-and-epidemiological situation in Moscow are taken and implemented.


Subject(s)
Environmental Illness/prevention & control , Health Status Indicators , Mass Screening/methods , Urban Population , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Environmental Exposure/adverse effects , Environmental Illness/epidemiology , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Morbidity/trends , Moscow/epidemiology , Retrospective Studies
11.
Gig Sanit ; (5): 3-5, 1998.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9816774

ABSTRACT

The paper presents data on motor transport pollution of the ambient air. From 1986 to 1996, the number of cars increased from 600,000 to 2,000,000, in Moscow the pollution index rose from 1.0 to 9.0. Motor transport is a source of noise and its proportion in the total noise is as high as 80%. In 1996, the noise threshold was 78-88 dBA. On the whole, the noise levels have increased by 5-6 dBA in the past decade. Experts' estimates indicate that 70-80% of Moscow inhabitants live in the areas of acoustic discomfort made by transport vehicles. Since the early 1990s, i.e. when the number of transport vehicles began drastically increasing, there has been an increase in the incidence of coronary heart disease and cerebrovascular diseases whose risk factors include noise and atmospheric pollution. Their incidence is on the rise every year, the changes in their rates correlate with increase in the number of motor vehicles and the atmospheric pollution index. The morbidity rates for chronic respiratory diseases in children and adults are presented, they are closely related to the increased number of cars and the higher index of atmospheric pollution. In the past 6 years, the total morbidity in infants of the first year of life has increased by 40%; the incidence of diseases of the nervous system, sense organs, and blood has shown a 1.5-fold increase, that of congenital malformations has twice grown. Poorer health in infants under 1 year is associated with the health in infants under 1 year is associated with the health of their mothers exposed to motor transport discharges. The findings strongly suggest that motor transport has an adverse effect on the population of Moscow and support that health of different populations is a criterion of sanitary and epidemiological well-being.


Subject(s)
Morbidity , Noise, Transportation/adverse effects , Urban Health , Vehicle Emissions/adverse effects , Adult , Child , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Moscow
13.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8820675

ABSTRACT

The article deals with the results of the study of causes of the pronounced territorial irregularity in the morbidity levels of shigellosis Sonnei. The analysis of the statistical data collected at 15 territories (large and small towns) revealed that differences in morbidity levels were determined mainly by the activity of the alimentary route of the transmission of infection (the degree determination was 78.4%). The levels of consumption of milk and dairy products by the population was the most important epidemiological determinant (the degree of determination was 54.1%). The levels of morbidity in shigellosis Sonnei were greatly influenced by the scope of the population survey for enteric infections, made by the bacteriological method (the degree of determination was 58.8%). The decrease of morbidity in shigellosis, observed at present in the Russian Federation, reflects a sharp drop in the production of milk and dairy products.


Subject(s)
Dysentery, Bacillary/epidemiology , Shigella sonnei , Disease Outbreaks/statistics & numerical data , Dysentery, Bacillary/transmission , Humans , Moldova/epidemiology , Moscow/epidemiology , Prevalence , Regression Analysis , Turkmenistan/epidemiology
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