English, asked by bhowmikmahajan, 7 months ago

paragraph on healthy your healthy Nation​

Answers

Answered by haasiniarjun2064
1

Answer:

There is always a reason for success. Sustainable victory always depends on healthy minds. Only healthy minds can carry positive attitude everywhere.

What is important in life is a key idea and a power to execute it. The so called will comes from a sound mind. We should always be mentally strong and physically strong. It is really true that we need to have power to withstand problems. Crossing hurdles is not so easy until we are healthy enough.

Explanation:

mark me as the brainiest

Answered by leanne02311
0

Explanation:

Our country is home to the largest child population in the world. A substantial 41 per cent, around 450 million, are children. But it is incongruent that for their education, health and protection a paltry 4 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP) is being spent. A great deal of political and social will is required to prioritise children in budgetary allocations.

Our country is home to the largest child population in the world. A substantial 41 per cent, around 450 million, are children. But it is incongruent that for their education, health and protection a paltry 4 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP) is being spent. A great deal of political and social will is required to prioritise children in budgetary allocations.On health, it has been observed that among the general category of patients in public hospitals, about 70 per cent were once child labourers. This percentage rose to 80 per cent in the case of tuberculosis. Constant exposure to smoke, dust, noxious gases, chemicals and high temperatures affects the lungs, eyes, and other vital organs of children. By letting manufacturers exploit them as inexpensive labour, the government is inheriting an army of sick and invalid persons in the years to come. The working children of today are virtually the liabilities of tomorrow. A large portion of the government’s budgetary allocation will have to be accorded for health care and reparations in the foreseeable future. This will have a crippling effect on the development agenda. Such oversight should be condemned strongly by all opinion holders.

Our country is home to the largest child population in the world. A substantial 41 per cent, around 450 million, are children. But it is incongruent that for their education, health and protection a paltry 4 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP) is being spent. A great deal of political and social will is required to prioritise children in budgetary allocations.On health, it has been observed that among the general category of patients in public hospitals, about 70 per cent were once child labourers. This percentage rose to 80 per cent in the case of tuberculosis. Constant exposure to smoke, dust, noxious gases, chemicals and high temperatures affects the lungs, eyes, and other vital organs of children. By letting manufacturers exploit them as inexpensive labour, the government is inheriting an army of sick and invalid persons in the years to come. The working children of today are virtually the liabilities of tomorrow. A large portion of the government’s budgetary allocation will have to be accorded for health care and reparations in the foreseeable future. This will have a crippling effect on the development agenda. Such oversight should be condemned strongly by all opinion holders.Dismal health indicators Several years ago, I travelled to villages in Mandsaur district in Madhya Pradesh along with the Chair of the National Human Rights Commission. What I witnessed there was beyond belief. The men, who had once been child labourers in slate pencil mining, had passed away due to a form of occupational lung disease called silicosis. The villages were wholly occupied by widowed women and children with hardly any old men. Similarly, I came across many young patients of psittacosis, an incurable disease that often affects workers in the carpet and woollen industries. Due to the lack of research in this field, most doctors would diagnose these diseases as tuberculosis or other respiratory infection and hence, fail to rescue the victims.

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