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Settling with danger: conditions and health problems in peri-urban neighbourhoods in Aleppo, SyriaSyrian Center for Tobacco Studies in Aleppo, Syria, fadi{at}scts-sy.org
jpmock{at}itsa.ucsf.edu
Department of Health and Sport Sciences, and Center for Community Health, at the University of Memphis, Tennessee, kdward{at}memphis.edu
Syrian Center for Tobacco Studies in Aleppo, Syria, and Aleppo Cancer Center Project, mfouad{at}scs-net.org
Behavioral Medicine Program, Department of Psychology, at the University of Memphis, Tennessee, b.beech{at}mail.psyc.memphis.edu
Syrian Center for Tobacco Studies in Aleppo, Syria, and the Institute of Epidemiology and Social Medicine in Muenster, Germany, maziak{at}net.sy In the Eastern Mediterranean region, mass rural-to-urban migration and uncontrolled population growth in low-income countries such as Syria have given rise to sprawling unplanned peri-urban development. Virtually no data are available on the environmental conditions and health status of residents of such communities. This paper describes formative qualitative research in eight settlements in informal zones around Aleppo, Syrias second-largest city, to assess environmental problems and health hazards. Several common themes emerged regarding community-level conditions that placed residents at substantial health risk, including sub-standard housing, limited access to high-quality health care, an absence of adequate essential services, problems with toxins and pollutants, poor educational and employment opportunities, and crime. Further research is being conducted to understand the distribution of these problems and the associations between environmental conditions and health status. Urgent action is needed to eliminate dangerous living conditions in these settlements.
Environment and Urbanization, Vol. 17, No. 2,
113-125 (2005) |
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