IJFANS International Journal of Food and Nutritional Sciences

ISSN PRINT 2319 1775 Online 2320-7876

Environmental Hazards and Their Effects.

Main Article Content

Shreshta Bandhu Rastogi

Abstract

ABSTRACT: Despite the fact that there is no global databank with sufficient coverage to support this hypothesis, it appears that the death as well as damage toll from natural calamities is increasing internationally. A civilization's ability to adapt to threats is determined by how unaffected it is by natural extremes. Natural disaster risk has risen considerably in the late twentieth century, with better preparedness and mitigation only marginally counteracting it. Frequently, the link between natural disasters as well as infectious illnesses is misunderstood. In the world that follows natural catastrophes, the probability of breakouts is often assumed to be quite high, a worry based on a supposed link between dead corpses and diseases. Nevertheless, population dislocation is the primary risk factor for epidemics after catastrophes. The amount of overcrowding, the community's underlying health, and availability of healthcare services all interact within the context of the local disease ecology to influence the risk of communicable diseases and death in the affected population. This article's author looked at the terrible effects of natural catastrophes and how they affect the country. The major goal of this review is to examine the consequences and losses generated by natural disasters. People would be able to comprehend the devastation caused by natural catastrophes in the future by reading this text, and they will be able to get advice for their own protection measures.

Article Details