Asked by lon
How does SDG No poverty impact global health for PEOPLE specifically? in simple highschooler form
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Short answer: Ending poverty (SDG 1: No Poverty) makes people healthier in many direct ways. When people have enough money and security, they can eat better, get medical care, live in safer homes, and avoid stress that makes them sick.
Here are the main ways poverty affects people’s health, in simple terms:
- Better nutrition — With enough income, families can buy enough healthy food. That lowers child malnutrition, helps kids grow normally, and makes adults stronger against illness.
- Easier access to health care — Money and social support let people pay for clinics, medicines, vaccinations, and doctors. That means fewer preventable deaths and diseases.
- Safer water and sanitation — Poverty reduction helps people get clean water and toilets. This cuts down on diarrhea, worms, and other infections, especially in children.
- Safer homes and environments — People can afford better housing and heat, reducing risks from cold, damp, pollution, and injuries.
- Healthier pregnancies and births — When families aren’t poor, pregnant women can get prenatal care and skilled birth help, lowering maternal and newborn deaths.
- Better mental health — Financial security reduces constant stress, anxiety, and depression that come from worrying about food, rent, or losing a job.
- Fewer contagious disease outbreaks — When people can isolate when sick, get care, and live in less crowded conditions, contagious diseases spread less.
- More education and healthier choices — With poverty reduced, kids stay in school and learn health knowledge (like hygiene and nutrition), and adults can afford healthier lifestyles.
- Less risky work and behavior — People don’t have to do dangerous jobs or rely on risky survival strategies (like unsafe sex or child labor), which lowers injury and disease rates.
Short example: A family that receives steady income can buy clean water, send their children to school, and pay for vaccine visits. Their kids grow healthier, miss less school, and are less likely to get life-threatening infections.
Bottom line: No Poverty makes people healthier by giving them the money, services, and stability they need to prevent and treat disease, stay well fed, and live in safe environments.
Here are the main ways poverty affects people’s health, in simple terms:
- Better nutrition — With enough income, families can buy enough healthy food. That lowers child malnutrition, helps kids grow normally, and makes adults stronger against illness.
- Easier access to health care — Money and social support let people pay for clinics, medicines, vaccinations, and doctors. That means fewer preventable deaths and diseases.
- Safer water and sanitation — Poverty reduction helps people get clean water and toilets. This cuts down on diarrhea, worms, and other infections, especially in children.
- Safer homes and environments — People can afford better housing and heat, reducing risks from cold, damp, pollution, and injuries.
- Healthier pregnancies and births — When families aren’t poor, pregnant women can get prenatal care and skilled birth help, lowering maternal and newborn deaths.
- Better mental health — Financial security reduces constant stress, anxiety, and depression that come from worrying about food, rent, or losing a job.
- Fewer contagious disease outbreaks — When people can isolate when sick, get care, and live in less crowded conditions, contagious diseases spread less.
- More education and healthier choices — With poverty reduced, kids stay in school and learn health knowledge (like hygiene and nutrition), and adults can afford healthier lifestyles.
- Less risky work and behavior — People don’t have to do dangerous jobs or rely on risky survival strategies (like unsafe sex or child labor), which lowers injury and disease rates.
Short example: A family that receives steady income can buy clean water, send their children to school, and pay for vaccine visits. Their kids grow healthier, miss less school, and are less likely to get life-threatening infections.
Bottom line: No Poverty makes people healthier by giving them the money, services, and stability they need to prevent and treat disease, stay well fed, and live in safe environments.
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