«
»

Top

Air Pollution Is Still Killing People In The United States

Published Sep 28, 2018

Air Pollution Is Still Killing People In The United States

Air pollution continues to drive premature deaths in the United States.

air pollution

Air pollution continues to drive premature deaths in the United States with no level of exposure leaving humans unaffected, according to new research.

The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, found a strong correlation between mortality and exposure to the pollutants ozone and particular matter, both of which contribute to smog. The higher the concentration of the pollutants in the air the higher the chance of an early death, according to the research.

While air pollution levels in the U.S. have declined significantly in recent decades thanks to regulation — including the Clean Air Act — many cities and regions still struggle to meet air quality standards set by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). But the new research suggests that even those standards may not be stringent enough: Air pollution contributes premature mortality even below those levels.

“We think air quality in the United States is good enough to protect our citizens,” Joel Schwartz, a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health who authored the study, said in a statement. “In fact we need to lower pollution levels even further.”

The study joins a growing body of research showing the deadly effects of human exposure to air pollution at any level. But while researchers behind many recent studies have relied on relatively small data sets, the new study used data from more than 60 million Medicare beneficiaries between 2000 and 2012.

Air pollution has received the most attention in the developing world, and for good reason. Recent research published in the journal Nature estimated that air pollution leads to more than three million deaths annually. But research has also showed that tens of thousands of people in the U.S. face an early death because of exposure to air pollution.

The Trump Administration has promised to focus its environmental efforts on “clean air and clean water,” but has also sought to undo or defund many of the programs that address those issues. At President Donald Trump’s direction, the EPA has begun a process to undo rules regulating power plant emissions, which contribute to a variety of health ailments, in addition to climate change. The Trump budget proposal also includes funding cuts for EPA programs across the board. “Despite compelling data, the Trump administration is moving headlong in the opposite direction,” scientists wrote in a New England Journal editorial accompanying the study. “We must redouble our commitment to clean air. If such protections lapse, Americans will suffer.”

1 comment


Lee__R • Community manager
on 9/28/18
Air pollution continues to drive premature deaths in the United States.

A recent study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, found a strong correlation between mortality and exposure to the pollutants ozone and particular matter, both of which contribute to smog. The higher the concentration of the pollutants in the air the higher the chance of an early death, according to the research.

While air pollution levels in the U.S. have declined significantly in recent decades thanks to regulation — including the Clean Air Act — many cities and regions still struggle to meet air quality standards set by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

But the new research suggests that even those standards may not be stringent enough: Air pollution contributes premature mortality even below those levels.

Recent research published in the journal Nature estimated that air pollution leads to more than three million deaths annually. But research has also showed that tens of thousands of people in the U.S. face an early death because of exposure to air pollution.

The Trump Administration has promised to focus its environmental efforts on “clean air and clean water,” but has also sought to undo or defund many of the programs that address those issues. The EPA has begun a process to undo rules regulating power plant emissions, which contribute to a variety of health ailments, in addition to climate change. The Trump budget proposal also includes funding cuts for EPA programs across the board.

"We must redouble our commitment to clean air. If such protections lapse, Americans will suffer," scientists wrote in a New England Journal editorial accompanying the study,

Read the full article here: Time

What do you feel about this research?

What city do you reside and do you feel that air pollution is a growing problem in your city and surrounding area?

What can the government and us as citizens do to decrease air pollution and its detrimental effects?

You will also like

"Scentimental": The power of fragrance on our mental health!

Read the article
What are the dangers associated with the over-the-counter sale of certain medicines?

What are the dangers associated with the over-the-counter sale of certain medicines?

Read the article
Meet Lee, Your Community Manager

Meet Lee, Your Community Manager

Read the article
Telemedicine: Remote examinations and operations are here!

Telemedicine: Remote examinations and operations are here!

Read the article

Most commented discussions