BALTIMORE, MD
(October 24, 2008) – Governor Martin
O’Malley today announced the release of
Maryland’s Children and the
Environment, a report that provides
a comprehensive look at the relationship
between the state’s environment and the
health of its children.
"Our children represent our future,"
Governor O'Malley said. "Tools such as
this report better help us understand
and develop solutions to the adverse
impact that the environment has on our
children's health."
The report was
compiled by the departments of Health
and Mental Hygiene (DHMH) and
Environment (MDE) with funding, in part,
from the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency.
“We intend this
report to be the beginning of a regular
effort to catalog and present data on
children’s environmental health that can
be used by the public and policy makers
to set priorities and measure progress,”
said DHMH Secretary John M. Colmers.
“Kids need a healthy environment to
thrive.”
The report uses
statistics routinely compiled by state
agencies over the past 10 – 15 years to
examine trends across a broad range of
environmental hazards and health
outcomes that are of concern to the
public and policy makers. The report
was funded in part by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency.
"We have made
dramatic progress in the reduction of
environmental health hazards such as
children's exposure to lead, but we are
not going to stop there," said MDE
Secretary Shari T. Wilson. "Children
are potentially affected by a wide range
of environmental hazards, and this
report provides all of us -- parents,
communities and policy makers -- with
ideas to improve their health."
Recent actions
taken by state officials will reduce
children’s exposures to some
environmental hazards. For example, the
Healthy Air Act will limit mercury
emissions from the state’s power plants,
and the Lead Poisoning Prevention Act of
2008 will provide additional protections
for tenants who must move due to lead
paint exposure.
Maryland’s Children and the
Environment illustrates the type of
data that might prove useful to
researchers and public health efforts in
the future. Endocrine disruptors in the
environment, pharmaceuticals and
personal care products, the built
environment (e.g., neighborhood design),
and influences of the environment on
early development are all issues that
preliminary data suggest might adversely
affect children’s health.
In addition, the report identifies some
of the challenges that confront Maryland
officials in their effort to improve
children’s health and the environment,
including the disproportionate burden of
environmental exposures and health
problems borne by certain communities
and groups based on race, class, or
other factors.
Maryland is taking steps to implement
the recommendations in the report.
These steps include:
-
Creation of a Maryland Environmental
Public Health Tracking Network,
which will integrate environmental
and health data in a single online
resource for state agencies and the
public.
-
Introduction of legislation to
strengthen environmental health
surveillance programs in the state
by promoting data-sharing among
state agencies.
-
Promotion of collaborative efforts
between research institutions,
non-governmental organizations,
state and local agencies, and the
federal government to address issues
of children’s environmental health.