Connect with us

JAMMU & KASHMIR

Poorly maintained air conditioners pose serious health rick : DAK | KNO

With increase in the use of air conditioners at homes, workplaces and cars due to soaring temperatures, Doctors Association Kashmir (DAK) today said that poorly maintained air conditioners are potentially harmful and pose serious health risks.

Published

on

kno news

President DAK Dr Nisar ul Hassan in a statement said that poorly maintained air conditioners are breeding grounds for deadly microbes that cause serious illnesses.


These cooling units provide safe environment for some of the dangerous bacteria like Legionella that causes Legionnaires’ disease, a severe form of Pneumonia (lung infection).


People contract this infection through contaminated air and manifest with high fever, muscle aches, cough and shortness of breath.


Between 5 and 30 % of people who get the disease die and people who are most likely to die are elderly and those with chronic medical conditions.


Each year, between 8000 to 18, 000 people in the United States alone are hospitalized with Legionnaires’ disease.


Most of the cases in Kashmir go undetected because of lack of awareness and many might be dying undiagnosed as there is no testing facility.


Air conditioning units accumulate pollens, mold spores and dust mites that worsen asthma and allergies.


These pollutants can make people’s noses clog or run and they can develop breathing difficulty.


ACs pulls out moisture from the skin and leaves it dry and stretched.


Also, skin becomes prone to developing creases and wrinkles which hastens ageing process.


AC environment tends to dry out eyes causing irritation, itching and tearing of eyes.


Research shows that people who work in air conditioned environment experience chronic headaches and fatigue which leaves them vulnerable to contracting cold, flu and other illnesses.

 

 

Trending

TOP STORIES2 hours ago

‘Viral video’ of a man with pigeon inside mosque, triggers outrage; Grand Mufti seeks action | KNO

TOP STORIES2 hours ago

Article 370 revocation matter of pride for country, BJP: PM Modi | KNO

TOP STORIES2 hours ago

India becoming world’s fastest-growing economy under PM Modi’s leadership: LG Sinha | KNO

TOP STORIES2 hours ago

Kashmir records 44 pc rainfall deficit, Jammu near normal from Oct to Dec 25 | KNO

TOP STORIES2 hours ago

Sonamarg records over 4.17 lakh tourists till November this year | KNO

TOP STORIES2 hours ago

‘Policing beyond enforcement’: J&K Police held 1,100+ outreach events, heard 2.3 lakh voices in north Kashmir in 2025 | KNO

TOP STORIES2 hours ago

Tourism festival kicks off in Pahalgam, to continue till year-end | KNO

TOP STORIES2 hours ago

‘Jingle bells in Srinagar’: Christmas celebrated with prayers, hope, harmony at Holy Family Church | KNO

TOP STORIES2 hours ago

Winter festivities, roadshows planned to boost footfall post snowfall surge: Jt Dir Tourism | KNO

TOP STORIES2 hours ago

Time for ‘cat census’ too as bite cases strain rabies resources in Kashmir | KNO

TOP STORIES2 hours ago

LG pays tribute to socialist leader and former President of BHU Students’ Union Babu Markandeya Singh | KNO

TOP STORIES2 hours ago

Director Estates conducts extensive inspection of office, residential accommodations at Srinagar | KNO

TOP STORIES3 hours ago

Article 370 abrogation completed unfinished task: Rajnath Singh | KNO

TOP STORIES3 hours ago

HM Shah to inaugurate 2-day ‘Anti-Terror Conference’ in New Delhi tomorrow | KNO

TOP STORIES3 hours ago

Dulhasti Stage‑II gets environmental clearance | KNO

TOP STORIES3 hours ago

Ahead of New Year, Jammu, Punjab frontier areas on high alert | KNO

TOP STORIES3 hours ago

Army revises social media guidelines

Copyright © 2021