BEIJING, Aug. 10 (Xinhua) -- China will start to
monitor the endemic poisoning of coal-burning arsenic
and fluoride as environmentally-related illnesses continue to plague coal-rich central
and western regions, the Ministry of
Health said Monday.
Information to be monitored includes the management of arsenic
and fluorine-rich
coal mines, the progress of old furnace replacements
and local people's environmentally-related illnesses, according to a statement released Monday on the ministry's website.
Fluorosis often results in yellow teeth, twisted spines, aching joints
and deformed leg bones while long-term consumption of arsenic can lead to skin cancer
and even death.
The coal-burning poisoning results mainly from cooking ranges as many rural households use arsenic
and fluorine-rich
coal as their major cooking fuel.
Since most clay stoves in central
and western regions don't have chimneys, there's no way for the poisonous contents to vent. It's concentrated in the smoke from cooking, so people breathe it. It also contaminates what is being cooked on the stove.
According to a statement, every year a total of 31 counties
and cities in Jiangxi, Hubei, Hunan, Chongqing, Sichuan, Guizhou, Yunnan
and Shaanxi will be randomly selected for the monitoring between September
and next February.
The monitoring will be carried out by disease control
and prevention centers at county level
and the results will be reported through the ministry to the State Council.
China has been fighting the illnesses mainly by replacing traditional stoves
and promoting people's awareness.
In June, the
Health Ministry launched a project to curb fluorosis in six provinces, including Yunnan
and Guizhou. This year, it will upgrade the stoves of 870,000 households, with each getting 400 yuan (58.5 U.S. dollars) in compensation.
The new stoves
pipe the smoke out of the room.