Environment As the skin is in constant contact with its surroundings, the environment is an important consideration when thinking about skin health. The immediate, local environment has a biological impact, thus if it is cold the skin responds with goose bumps, if it is hot it will sweat. A hot dry environment particularly one found in overheated homes can cause the skin to become very dry and itchy, particularly in the elderly. This section will look at the impact that environmental changes at a global level may have on the skin and touch on diseases related to poverty. It is difficult to prove categorically that any long-term, global environmental changes have a direct impact on skin health. There are many confounding factors to consider, and it is therefore virtually impossible to make a direct link between degradation of the environment and changes in skin health. For example, there is no doubt that our earth has less ozone protection than it did, which means that we are less well protected from UV radiation than in previous centuries (Earth Observatory, 2009). How much the increase in skin cancers can be attributed to this and how much can be attributed to behaviour change (e.g. more exposure to UV radiation due to increased number of holidays in sunny climates) is difficult to say. However the Earth Observatory report quotes the United Nations Environment programme as saying that a sustained decrease of 1% in the ozone layer will ultimately lead to a 2–3% increase in skin cancer. For atopic eczema, there would appear to be an upward trend over the last 30–40 years with an increasing prevalence of the disease (Williams, 1997). This trend seems to affect urban populations more than rural (Sherriff et al., 2002). This may be attributable to the hygiene hypothesis (see Box 1.1), but this theory is not agreed upon by all practitioners.
Diseases of poverty Skin diseases of poverty are usually related to infective processes or infestations. Poor living environments, lack of access to clean water and hot climatic conditions all lead to increased likelihood of infections or infestations of the skin. Specific examples include scabies, which in resource poor countries, where people live in very close proximity to one another, affect significant proportions of the population, especially children. Fungal and bacterial infections are more likely when there is lack of clean washing water, when wounds cannot be properly dressed and when people may be immunocompromised through poor diet or HIV infection. Vector borne diseases for example those carried by a mosquito, are more common in tropical areas where disease carrying mosquitoes thrive. An example of such a disease is lymphatic filariasis (described in Box 1.2) which can cause lymphoedema, hydrocoele and significant skin changes. It is important because of the scale of the problem (1.3 billion people around the world are at risk of contracting the disease and 120 million are infected) and because of the serious impact that it has on quality of life and economic stability (Global Alliance for the Elimination of Lymphatic Filariasis, 2004).
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