Oct 30, 2025
Oct 30, 2025
by Neelima Garg
 		 Although  		water is life savior, but in some of the states in India polluted water  		has caused health hazards and increased number of cancer cases. In rural  		Punjab water has turned into poison because of excess of pesticides in  		groundwater. A study has been carried out to see the effects of  		pesticides on the health of villagers and it has some alarming findings  		which are as follows.
Although  		water is life savior, but in some of the states in India polluted water  		has caused health hazards and increased number of cancer cases. In rural  		Punjab water has turned into poison because of excess of pesticides in  		groundwater. A study has been carried out to see the effects of  		pesticides on the health of villagers and it has some alarming findings  		which are as follows.
Rapid industrialization has caused several worst impact on health. In a  		village which is 4 Km. from Amritsar town, children complain of rashes  		and boils. The drinking water in these villages has turned toxic due to  		high concentration of heavy metals. These chemicals have seeped into the  		village�s groundwater from the polluted drain water causing these  		unlikely ailments. No surprise, there�s also evidence of these metals  		entering the food chain. According to the study, pesticides have also  		been detected in vegetables, even in human milk and blood samples.
There is clear evidence that irrigation of fields with highly  		contaminated drain water and exposure to pesticides is leading the  		neuro, reproductive and geno-toxicity. The genetic damage may not be  		visible right now. But it will manifest itself in future.
Residents point out that the water they draw from hand-pumps turns yellow  		in no time at all. Part of the problem possibly dates back to the Green  		Revolution in the mid-60s and 70s when pesticide use became common.  		Since then, the use of fertilizers has increased manifold. But rapid  		industrialization without any attention to the possible fallouts on  		health is also a major factor leading to the current state of affairs. 		
Image under license with  		Gettyimages.com 
Neelima Garg is Executive Engineer with Uttarakhand Jal Sansthan, Dehra Dun
27-Jan-2007
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