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Thursday, April 25, 2024

WWF ambassadors teach kids about health and environment

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It’s a chilly morning but the classrooms at General Roxas Elementary School in Quezon City are heating up, abuzz with the chitter-chatter of nearly 100 students, discussing ideas and listening to WWF-Philippines national ambassadors Marc Nelson and Rovilson Fernandez, plus a team of environmental educators from WWF-Philippines and Pascual Laboratories. 

“Can you guys name all the vegetables in the song “Bahay Kubo”?” asked Rovilson. “Regularly eating vegetables can build up your immune system and shield you from cough, colds and other sicknesses brought on by stronger typhoons,” he explains.  

In the adjacent classroom Marc was explaining how climate change is exacerbated by the burning of fossil fuels. “Switching to renewable energy sources like wind power and solar parks can stop global warming,” he said as teachers hand out climate change brochures. 

The two recently participated in WWF and Pascual Laboratories’ SEED (Sowing to Empower, Educate and Develop) Programme to enhance local communities’ resilience to climate change by eliminating diseases and switching to healthier lifestyles through  proper diet, exercise, vitamins and good hygiene. 

In the last five years, the program has taught thousands of elementary school students about the vital link between climate change and health. Health conditions and diseases like asthma, heatstroke, leptospirosis, typhoid fever, cholera and so forth are spurred by climate change. 

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World Wide Fund for Nature Philippines national ambassador Marc Nelson explains to students  of General Roxas Elementary School how the burning of fossil fuels exacerbates climate change 

A study released in 2012 by the New York Academy of Sciences shows how climate change can dramatically spread vector-borne diseases such as malaria to many areas. The World Health Organization estimates that climate shifts are responsible for 6 percent of global malaria cases and that many communities in Asia and Africa are unprepared for more disease outbreaks. 

“The floods caused by rains or the incessant summer heat can drive up incidences of leptospirosis or heat stroke,” explains WWF-Philippines Environmental Educator Dino Calderon, who also taught 80 students’ parents during the learning drive. By simply washing our hands or remembering to hydrate before we go out of our homes, we can bolster our resilience to climate change. Our aim is simple – to promote better health via a better environment.”

The education sessions were held on Jan. 6 for nearly 200 parent and pupils at General Roxas Elementary School. 

Concludes Pascual Laboratories’ Mia Pascual-Cenzon, “We cannot overemphasize the role of education in improving people’s lives. We are a poor country and are very vulnerable to climate change. By educating the next generation of kids, we can inculcate the right values to allow them to adapt to and help stop climate change. We’ve been doing this for five years and we hope that our partnership will have an impact on the lives of our students.”

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