IndianSubcontinent

Image copyrightSusannah SavageImage caption Young women in the village are anxious about having children and providing for them In small villages along the eastern coast of Bangladesh, researchers have noticed an unexpectedly high rate of miscarriage.

As they investigated further, scientists reached the conclusion that climate change might be to blame.

Journalist Susannah Savage went into these communities to find out more.

"Girls are better than boys," says 30-year-old Al-Munnahar.

"Boys do not listen.

They are arrogant.

Girls are polite." Al-Munnahar, who lives in a small village on the east coast of Bangladesh, has three sons but wished for a girl.

Once she thought she would have a daughter, but she miscarried the baby.

She is among several women who have lost a baby in her village.

Image copyrightSusannah SavageImage caption Almost all the food they eat in Al-Munnahar's village now has to be bought at markets some distance away While miscarriages are not out of the ordinary, scientists who follow the community have noticed an increase, particularly compared to other areas.

The reason for this, they believe, is climate change.

The walk to Failla Para, Al-Munnahar's village, is arduous: in the dry season, the narrow track leads into a swamp, and in rainy season, into the sea.

The village itself is not much more than a mound of mud with a few shacks and a chicken pen perched precariously on the slippery surface.

"Nothing grows here anymore," says Al-Munnahar.

Not many years ago - up until the 1990s - these swamp lands were paddy fields.

Image copyrightSusannah SavageImage caption The village, in the district of Chakaria, is built on salty mud, and families often live in wet, damp conditions when the water gets into their home If rice production back then was not profitable, it was at least viable.

Not anymore.

Rising waters and increasing salinity have forced the wealthiest among the villagers to change to shrimp farming or salt harvesting.

Today, few paddy fields remain.

"This is climate change in action," says Dr Manzoor Hanifi, a scientist from the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research Bangladesh (ICDDRB), a research institute.

"The effect on the land is visible, but the effect on the body: that we don't see." Brine and briberyICDDRB have been running a health and demographic surveillance site in and around the district of Chakaria, near Cox's Bazaar, for the last thirty years, enabling them to detect even small changes in the health of the communities they monitor.

Over the last few years, many families have left the plains and moved inland, into the forest hill area—mostly those with enough money to bribe forest wardens.

"We paid a 230,000 Taka ($2,752, £2,106) bribe to build the house," says Kajol Rekha, who moved to the hills from the plains with her husband and two children three years ago.

"Because of the water, my kids would always have a fever, especially when our house remained wet after the flood.

Everything is easier here." These environmental migrants are faring relatively well, able to grow crops and nearer transport routes to access jobs and schools.

They are also in better health than those they left behind.

In particular, women inland are less likely to miscarry.

Between 2012 and 2017, the ICDDRB scientists registered 12,867 pregnancies in the area they monitor, which encompasses both the hill area and the plains.

They followed the pregnant women through until the end of the pregnancy and found that women in the coastal plains, living within 20km (12mi) of the coastline and 7m above sea level were 1.3 times more likely to miscarry than women who live inland.

The difference may seem small, but the number of miscarriages on the plains seems to be growing, says Dr Hanifi.

Moreover, when comparing the whole Chakaria region to Matlab, another area monitored by ICDDRB, in a part of Bangladesh far removed from the coast, the scientists also saw a noticeable difference.

In Chakaria, 11% of pregnancies end in miscarriage.

In Matlab it is 8%.

This difference, the scientists believe, is to do with the amount of salt in the water the women drink - the increase of which is caused by climate change.

Families with no choiceSea levels are rising, in part because of the melting of icecaps, but also because the earth's rising temperature effects atmospheric pressure: even a small change in this causes an inverse effect on the sea level.

"With a one millibar decrease in atmosphere pressure," says Dr Hanifi, "the sea level rises by ten millimetres: a series of depressions in atmospheric pressure can cause a considerable rise in water levels in shallow ocean basins."When sea levels rise, salty sea water flows into fresh water rivers and streams, and eventually into the soil.

Most significantly, it also flows into underground water stores - called aquifers - where it mixes with, and contaminates, the fresh water.

It is from this underground water that villages source their water, via tube wells.

The water that the village pump in Failla Para spews out is a little red in colour.

It is also full of salt.

This does not stop villagers drinking from the pump, though - nor from bathing in it and washing and cooking their food in it.

The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that people consume no more than 5g of salt per day.

In Chakaria, those living in the coastal zone consume up to 16g per day - over three times what those in the hilly areas do.

In countries like the UK, health campaigns have cautioned against excessive salt consumption for years.

It causes hypertension, increasing the risk of strokes and heart attacks, and, among pregnant women, miscarriages and preeclampsia.

These Bangladeshi families have no idea of the health risk from the water they are drinking, and even if they did, they have little choice.

Image copyrightSusannah SavageImage caption Fifty-year old Janatara would never consider leaving "Salt is bad for crops," says 50-year Janatara, who was born in the village and has never left.

When asked if she or her family would leave Failla Para she laughs: "No, of course not! I've been here my whole life, and anyway, where would we go We are poor." 'Life is so hard here'Her neighbour, 23-year old Sharmin would like to leave.

She is uncertain what future there can be for her two sons in Failla Para: "Life is so hard here," she says.

Despite this, though, she plans to have another child soon.

At the moment, the chance of miscarriage for women like Sharmin and Al-Munnahar is only slightly elevated.

But unless something is done, says Dr Hanifi, "this will only get worse, as Bangladesh feels the effects of climate change more and more." Image copyrightSusannah SavageImage caption Sharmin has two daughters, both of whom were delivered without a midwife As a low-lying country, full of flood plain land, Bangladesh is particularly vulnerable to changes caused by global warming.

But other countries elsewhere, are also likely to experience similar repercussions from rising sea levels.

Across the Indian Ocean, the destruction caused by the 2005 tsunami caused saltwater to contaminate agricultural lands and freshwater drinking sources.

In the American state of Florida, rising sea levels has also led to saltwater encroaching on bodies of fresh water.

Surprisingly, however, the Chakaria health and demographic surveillance site, which monitors the health-related impact of climate change, is one of the only sites of its kind."A lot of money is being thrown at climate change interventions," says Dr Hanafi, "but almost none of it goes into research - not for the public health impact anyway.

Everyone is thinking about environmental disasters.

No one is thinking about public health."All pictures copyright.





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues-Publication from Jan 2021


Buy Our Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting



It's Voluntary! Take care of your Family, Friends and People around You First and later think about us. Its Fine if you dont wish to contribute and if you wish to contribute then think about the Homeless first and Feed them. We can survive with your wishes too :-). You can Buy our Merchandise too which are of the finest quality.


STRIPE


Israeli defence minister hints at ground invasion as Hamas? leader in Lebanon killed


Smoke still rising from bombed rubble 2 days after Nasrallah assassination


Lots of Israeli aircraft strike Houthi targets in Yemen, as 2nd senior Hezbollah commander confirmed eliminated in Lebanon


How Israel eliminated Hassan Nasrallah and lit the fuse on the Lebanon border


'Nothing can prepare you' - Head of Concern explains moment bombs dropped on Beirut


Ishaan Tharoor: Overwhelming anger from all sides as Benjamin Netanyahu stays defiant before UN General Assembly


Israelis target Hezbollah's HQ in Beirut with enormous airstrike


Netanyahu defies calls for ceasefire in Lebanon and orders 'full blast' from Israeli military versus Hezbollah


Benjamin Netanyahu defies require ceasefire in Lebanon and orders 'full blast' from Israeli military versus Hezbollah


Israel's economy on the verge as its costly war device rolls on


UK joins US and allies in calling for ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah


Benjamin Netanyahu dismisses US-led ceasefire plans and orders military to fight at complete power


?We?ve been waiting for it? ? Israelis in the north anxious as Hezbollah hits back, but give backing to war


Israeli troops told to prepare for ground operation in Lebanon


Hezbollah fires rocket at Tel Aviv after Israeli strikes on Lebanon


Death toll from Israeli strikes on Lebanon passes 560 as long-range Hezbollah missile intercepted


?We smelled the bombs. Then we started to see traffic jams? ? thousands flee as Israeli strikes on Lebanon continue


Israeli airstrikes leave over 550 in dead Lebanon including 50 children as IDF says senior Hezbollah commander killed


Israeli airstrikes eliminate over 550 in Lebanon including 50 children as Hezbollah counters


Explainer: What is Hezbollah and what is its role in Lebanon


Israel and Hezbollah launch brand-new attacks after fatal day in Lebanon


?No one is left there, everyone has fled? ? families flee as Israeli bombs rain down on Lebanon


Israeli airstrikes eliminate a minimum of 492 and hurt 1,600 throughout Lebanon


Joseph Krauss: Neither side wants an 'full-scale war' in Lebanon, but Benjamin Netanyahu is now just one action away


Were seeing outright disregard of international law by Israel- Taoiseach responds to airstrikes in Lebanon today as death toll reaches 492


'A possible disastrous opening of a second front in the war in the Middle East'


Hezbollah fires barrage of rockets at Israel as fears of all-out war grow


Gas explosion at coal mine in Iran eliminates a minimum of 31 people and injures 16


Hezbollah states 'open-ended battle of reckoning' with Israel as 100 rockets introduced throughout Northern Israel


At least 51 dead in Iran coal mine blast


Hezbollah and Israel exchange heavy fire after fatal strike on Beirut, which eliminated 45 people consisting of 3 children


Iran reveals new long-range drone at Tehran military parade and claims it can hit targets 4,000 km away


Death toll from Israeli strike on Beirut increases to 37, consisting of 3 children and Hezbollah top commander


In spite of performative restraint in the Middle East, the widening of war feels inescapable


Hezbollah official and 13 others eliminated in Israeli strike on Beirut


At least nine killed and 60 wounded in Israeli strike on Beirut


Hezbollah military leader killed as Israel bomb Beirut amid worries of war after pager attack injured thousands


Israeli soldiers filmed pushing bodies of Palestinians off roof in West Bank





23