Preterm Births Linked To Air Pollution Cost Billions In The US (time.com) 70
mdsolar quotes a report from TIME: Air pollution leads to 16,000 premature births in the United States each year, leading to billions of dollars in economic costs, according to new research. Researchers behind the study, published in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, found that preterm births associated with particulate matter -- a type of pollutant -- led to more than $4 billion in economic costs in 2010 due to medical care and lost productivity that results from disability. And, like many other public health issues, affected populations tend to be concentrated in low-income areas home to large numbers of minorities. "This is another piece of the evidentiary pie about why we should really be doing something about air pollution," says Tracey Woodruff, a professor who studies reproductive health and the environment at the University of California, San Francisco. "When you reduce air pollution you get lots of different health benefits." Countless studies have shown the effect of air pollution on cardiovascular and respiratory health -- killing millions each year. Air pollution leads to inflammation in blood vessels and contributes to lung cancer, asthma and a slew of other disorders. The effect on pregnancy may in some ways be an extension of those effects as air pollution disrupts the way a pregnant woman delivers oxygen to the fetus. Air pollution may also disrupt the endocrine system, keeping women from producing a protein needed to regulate pregnancy, researchers say.
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I'm here because they said something about an open bar.
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I'm here because they said something about an open bar.
They pulled me in with a promise of "Nudes for Nerds" . . .
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this is a tech story. technically it's STEM but that's what passes for tech nowadays. all the tech jobs are being shipped off to China and India anyway.
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Ths is what happens when yu have passed the technological singularity event horizon.
Even Ray Kurzweil predicted that n the future all jobs we were going to be lawyer/politicians.
Actually, we're outsourcing the lawyer jobs too.
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And how good is the science behind this story? Sure too much PM2.5 is bad, but what's the mechanism that would drive preterms??
The cause may very well be something else, and the story just more propaganda and disinformation.
How about doing away with the evil in trade treaties that allows pushing foods with poor content and location disclosure, and worse yet U.S. standards.
We've still got Bisphenol-A lining our cans???
Besides what they say that does, that leads to men with smaller junk! And maybe it'll mak
The poor at higher risk for everything (Score:3)
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So what you're saying is the air current comes straight down the middle of the island and blows outward on all sides?
No, it's a long island, hence the name Long Island. Simple physics, pollution expands out in a ring, but half of the pollution falls outside the populated area. The water currents take the water pollution away. The air currents will tend to move the polluted air away as well, since it's not a round island.
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Manhattan Island is not Long Island, and Long Island is not densely populated (well, it is in some areas, but for the most part it has lots of empty space). Manhattan Island is surrounded on three sides at relatively close proximity by other densely populated areas (Queens and Brooklyn (which ARE on Long Island), the Bronx, and the part of New Jersey west of the Hudson) so the idea that "half the pollution" magically leaves the area without being inhaled by anyone is nonsensical.
You could try looking at a m
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What's a map? Is that like some hardcopy TomTom?
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You mean, Manhattan is full of hot air? You know ...
Re: The poor at higher risk for everything (Score:1)
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The poor don't have Sharper Image ionizing air filters pumping ozone into their bedroom at night, while HEPA filters on the A/C system pull out larger particles...
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Short answer: no.
Stupid answer: why would it?
Explanation: Manhattan is close to the sea and the wind disperses the pollution.
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Because low income areas don't have the political power to stop highways, manufacturing, and other sources of pollution from being built near them. Or any other undesirable development for that matter.
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Because conjecture doesn't actually have to prove its assertions.
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This should be easily tested for by looking at a few areas subject to frequent pollution problems. A great place to test this would be the LA Basin, another would be the Wasatch front of Utah (Salt Lake City Metro area) Both are natural bowls that frequently trap high levels of pollution that cover the entire area equally, not caring if the neighborhood is poor, middle class or rich.
More of a data analysis than a cause strudy (Score:3, Insightful)
Regardless, this study seems to have a very wide margin of error associated with it.
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Yes, jobs are created (including mine) but do we really want this kind of economic activity? It's like saying that the VA Hospital system is an economic boon because of all the people employed there, so let's go have some more messy wars with lots of amputations and chronic psychological problems.
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In economic terms, they're broken windows.
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unverified assertion (Score:4, Interesting)
there are over 500,000 pre-term births in the USA, so 15,000 are due to particulate air pollution eh?
This little slice from the paper says it all, i.e., their claim is an ass-pull
Though uncertainty remains about the contribution of specific outdoor
air pollutants and
windows of vulnerability, multiple observational studies of prenatal exposure have associated
among other pollutants with adverse birth
outcomes, most especially LBW and PTB (Darrow et al. 2009; Kloog et al. 2012; Laurent et al.
2016), although some studies did not report this association (Johnson et al. 2016). In addition,
one quasi-experimental study identified reductions in PTB and LBW in association with
electronic toll collection, which also reduced traffic congestion and vehicle emissions
.
Further support for the notion that outdoor air pollution exposure may contribute to adverse
birth outcomes is provided by laboratory experiments that document oxidant stress, inflammation
and placental insufficiency as mechanisms by which air pollutants
can contribute to early
delivery (Institute of Medicine 2007; USEPA 2013; Woodruff et al. 2009).
Re:unverified assertion (Score:4, Insightful)
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A lot of this boils down to reporter bias... crime dropped dramatically in just 2 years in the city of Miami, due to a shift in reporting methods, actual crime probably increased during that same time.
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A lot of this boils down to reporter bias... actual crime probably increased
Oh the irony..
Stillbirth rate higher (Score:2)
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Really what we come down to is "more data needed", but that's a good point. Maybe the rates in Beijing are lower because of higher infant/fetus mortality (i.e. they don't even make it to the "birth" stage).
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Though uncertainty remains about the contribution of specific outdoor air pollutants and windows of vulnerability
Clearly the problem is exposure to Microsoft products.
When will we learn (Score:1)
I can only hope sooner rather than later we as a species accept the fact our bond to this earth is closer and more intimate than we have generally been aware. Things we do that impact the environment whether it is air pollution, water pollution, fracking, deforestation etc etc dramatically impacts our quality of life as a species. Furthermore the impact may not be felt in our lifetimes, but during the lifetimes of generations not yet born !
Re: Dramatically Impacting quality of life (Score:1)
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What about noise pollution? (Score:3)
Hypothesis: noise pollution leads to bad sleeping habits in a pregnant mother which negatively impact the health of a baby.
It would be interesting to see a study mapping noise pollution (high-density fire and ambulance all night, nearby night clubs or bars, etc...) with health of the child.
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Write a grant and go do it.
wow. (Score:2)
Don't worry (Score:2)