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Impact of Biomass Cooking on Women’s Health in Rural Sri Lanka

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dc.contributor.author Sandaroo, N.V.
dc.contributor.author Damayanthi, B.W.R.
dc.date.accessioned 2017-10-20T05:18:18Z
dc.date.available 2017-10-20T05:18:18Z
dc.date.issued 2016
dc.identifier.citation Sandaroo, N.V., Damayanthi, B.W.R. (2016). "Impact of Biomass Cooking on Women’s Health in Rural Sri Lanka", Proceedings of the Fifth Sri Lanka Economics Research Conference (SLERC) 2016, p. 107 en_US, si_LK
dc.identifier.issn 2279-2406
dc.identifier.uri http://dr.lib.sjp.ac.lk/handle/123456789/5932
dc.description.abstract Attached en_US, si_LK
dc.description.abstract More than half o f the developing world’s population, particularly rural poor households, depend on solid fuels such as agricultural residue, green waste, wood and wood derivatives, charcoal, coal, crop waste, and dung for their primary cooking. This high level of dependence on traditional solid fuels and inefficient and polluting cook stoves imposes huge health, environmental, economic, and social costs on the people in these economies. Biomass smoke contains an enormous number of substances, many o f which damage or are injurious to human health. Most important are particulates, carbon monoxide, nitrous oxides, sulphur oxides, formaldehyde, and polycyclic organic matter causing respiratory infections, nasopharyngeal and airways irritation, wheezing, chronic bronchitis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, low birth weight, an increase in prenatal deaths, cancers o f the lung, mouth, cataracts etc. (Banerjee_et al., 2012). Firewood collection, fuel processing (e.g., drying and cutting), cooking, and postmeal cleanup are traditionally female-gendered roles across the developing world. As a result, women are supposed to bear a disproportionate burden o f the negative health, economic and time poverty effects o f bio mass fuel. As per evidence gathered from several countries, exposure of women cooks to significantly higher particulate matter emissions is higher than men, up to four times men’s levels in Kenya and up to double the level o f men in South Asia studies. (Huq, et al., 2004). Recent research demonstrates evidence o f greater incidence o f respiratory illness and eye disease including a higher component o f disadvantage towards women regarding depression, blindness headaches, coughing, eye itching. According to Fullerton, et al., (2008) women are also expected to have more incidences o f headaches, anemia, and other symptoms of excessive carbon monoxide exposure because the negative impacts o f carbon monoxide in women, especially pregnant women, occur at significantly lower proportions than men
dc.language.iso en_US en_US, si_LK
dc.publisher Proceedings of the Fifth Sri Lanka Economics Research Conference (SLERC) 2016 en_US, si_LK
dc.title Impact of Biomass Cooking on Women’s Health in Rural Sri Lanka en_US, si_LK
dc.type Article en_US, si_LK


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