VOA慢速英语 2008 1217a(在线收听) | ||
This is the VOA Special English Health Report. Every day, more than two thousand children worldwide die from accidental injury. Each year, as many as three million children are saved from one leading cause of child deaths -- drowning. Yet survivors can suffer brain damage. As a result, the lifetime health and economic costs of a non-fatal drowning are the highest on average of any kind of injury. These are among the findings in the "World Report on Child Injury Prevention." The new report is the first of its kind from the World Health Organization and UNICEF. Doctor Etienne Krug at the W.H.O. says that every year, eight hundred thirty thousand children die from accidental injuries. ETIENNE KRUG: "It’s like wiping out every year the whole population of children in Chicago or a city like Marseilles. It’s a very big public health issue, which, unfortunately, has been ignored for too long. The main causes of child unintentional injuries are road traffic crashes, drowning, burns, falls and poisoning." Poor children everywhere are most at risk. But the report's top editor, Margie Peden, says more than ninety-five percent of child injuries happen in developing nations.
MARGIE PEDEN: "Africa, unfortunately, has the highest rate of all these accidental injuries, unintentional injuries. In particular, road traffic injuries, as well as poisoning. One of the reasons for that is because many people in Africa are still dependent on paraffin or kerosene for heating and lighting." | ||
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voa/2008/12/68351.html |