Travel2 mins ago
Icelandic Ash cloud heading here
Why no warnings from the government for asthmatics and those with lung diseases? This new eruption is worse than the last one for human health as it drops to ground level and will cover the country. They seem more interested in whether planes can fly!
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No best answer has yet been selected by rov1100. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Good link mamyalynne. It seems certain sections of the news media are trying to get the message out but politicians and the general media have not yet caught up especially when the cloud is due to hit Scotland tomorrow before progressing south.
For those on AB who refuse to look at links:
///Medical experts are advising people with lung conditions, such as asthma, to be prepared for the ash cloud that is expected to reach the UK on Tuesday///
For those on AB who refuse to look at links:
///Medical experts are advising people with lung conditions, such as asthma, to be prepared for the ash cloud that is expected to reach the UK on Tuesday///
Rov1100 -
I think you're overstating the threat to the UK.
The British Lung Foundation (http://www.lunguk.org/) have stated, “In light of the latest news that ash from the volcanic eruption in Iceland could reach the UK by Tuesday, we would advise people living with a lung condition in affected areas to carry their medication as a precaution....”. This statement is demonstrative of the perceived threat (ie. minimal).
By the time the ash cloud enters UK airspace, it is so diffuse that the threat to people with breathing problems is minute. Also, much of the ash cloud is at very high altitude and will not come to settle on the ground for many weeks/months and when it does, it will be over such a wide area (ie. the whole of Europe and western Asia) that concentrations of it will be almost undetectable. Unfortunately, the Icelanders who are in the immediate vicinity of the eruption are not so lucky and there's no doubt that for them the problem is very real and very serious.
However, from a UK public health perspective, I don't think there's any need to have concerns just yet.
I think you're overstating the threat to the UK.
The British Lung Foundation (http://www.lunguk.org/) have stated, “In light of the latest news that ash from the volcanic eruption in Iceland could reach the UK by Tuesday, we would advise people living with a lung condition in affected areas to carry their medication as a precaution....”. This statement is demonstrative of the perceived threat (ie. minimal).
By the time the ash cloud enters UK airspace, it is so diffuse that the threat to people with breathing problems is minute. Also, much of the ash cloud is at very high altitude and will not come to settle on the ground for many weeks/months and when it does, it will be over such a wide area (ie. the whole of Europe and western Asia) that concentrations of it will be almost undetectable. Unfortunately, the Icelanders who are in the immediate vicinity of the eruption are not so lucky and there's no doubt that for them the problem is very real and very serious.
However, from a UK public health perspective, I don't think there's any need to have concerns just yet.
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