A new research has shown that air pollution causes harm to people at all stages of life, including reducing sperm count and damaging foetal growth.
Detailed analysis of the ways it causes harm from pre-birth to old age was done based on a review of key evidence on the effects of air pollution, drawing from more than 35,000 studies in the last 10 years.
The researchers, from Imperial College London’s Environmental Research Group, said particulate matter (PM2.5) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2), both of which come from vehicle exhausts are particularly harmful.
There is no evidence to identify a threshold where PM2.5 does no harm and even people living in the least polluted suburbs of London are still being affected, they said, adding that there is an urgent need to incorporate population vulnerability in air pollution priorities
“While headline figures on the health impact of air pollution focus on the equivalent number of premature deaths, the wider impacts are hiding in plain sight in the contribution of air pollution to the burden of chronic diseases.
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“These affect our quality of life and have a large cost to society through additional health and social care costs, as well our ability to learn, work and contribute to society,” part of the report reads.
Air pollution harms foetal development during pregnancy, and can cause low birth weight, miscarriages and a low sperm count in men.
In children, it can stunt lung growth, cause asthma and affect blood pressure, cognitive abilities and mental health.
In adulthood, it makes early death more likely through multiple chronic illnesses, cancer and strokes.
“Perhaps, the most important new finding is evidence related to both the impact of air pollution on brain health, including mental health and dementia, and early life impacts that could lead to future health burdens within the population,” the authors wrote.
“Both represent significant, but currently unquantified costs to society and the economy.”
Ella Adoo-Kissi-Debrah was the first person to have air pollution listed as a cause of death for an individual person in the UK when she died in 2013 at the age of nine after suffering an asthma attack brought on by inhaling traffic fumes.
Up to 43,000 people a year are dying in the UK because of air pollution, according to Public Health England estimates and it could cost the country as much as £18.6 billion by 2035 unless action is taken.
The authors of the current research said: “Policies should be aimed at reducing the accumulating harm from air pollution and the health degradation, in addition to protecting people who have become vulnerable to current pollution concentrations.”
The work was commissioned by the Greater London Authority and drew heavily on findings from the World Health Organisation, the UK Committee on the Medical Effects of Air Pollution, the Royal College of Physicians, the Health Effects Institute, and the International Agency for Research on Cancer.
Story was adapted from the Independent.