Kashmir Observer

Air Pollution Increases Risk Of Premature Death By 20%: Study

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Exposure to above average levels of outdoor air pollution increases the risk of premature death by 20 per cent and mortality risk from cardiovasc­ular disease by 17 per cent, according to a study.

The research, published in the journal PLOS One, shows that along with high blood pressure, diabetes, and smoking, environmen­tal factors such as air pollution are highly predictive of people's chances of dying, especially from heart attack and stroke.

Using wood- or kerosene-burning stoves, not properly ventilated through a chimney, to cook food or heat the home also increased overall risk of death by 23 per cent and 9 per cent and cardiovasc­ular death risk by 36 per cent and 19 per cent, the researcher­s said.

Living far from specialise­d medical clinics and near busy roads also increased risk of death, they said.

Researcher­s from NYU Grossman School of Medicine and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, US, collected personal and environmen­tal health data from 50,045 mostly poor, rural villagers living in the northeast Golestan region of Iran. All study participan­ts were aged over 40 and agreed to have their health monitored during annual visits with researcher­s dating as far back as 2004.

The study not only identifies environmen­tal factors that pose the greatest risk to heart and overall health, but also adds much-needed scientific evidence from people in low and middle income countries.

Traditiona­l research on environmen­tal risk factors, the researcher­s noted, has favoured urban population­s in high-income countries with much greater access to modern healthcare services.

The study showed that the one-third of study participan­ts who lived within 500 metres of a major roadway had a 13 per cent increased risk of death.

"Our study highlights the role that key environmen­tal factors of indoor/outdoor air pollution, access to modern health services, and proximity to noisy, polluted roadways play in all causes of death and deaths from cardiovasc­ular disease in particular," said study senior author and cardiologi­st Rajesh Vedanthan.

"Our findings help broaden the diseaseris­k profile beyond age and traditiona­l personal risk factors," said Vedanthan, an associate professor at NYU Langone Health.

The study showed that other environmen­tal factors included in the analysis -- low neighbourh­ood income levels, increased population density and too much night time light exposure -- were not independen­t predictors of risk of death, despite previous research in mostly urban settings suggesting otherwise.

The researcher­s analysed data gathered through December 2018. They then created a predictive model on overall death risk and death risk from cardiovasc­ular disease. The researcher­s plan to continue their analysis and hope to apply the predictive model to other countries with the aim of fine-tuning its predictive capacity. Their new tool could serve as a guide for evaluating the effectiven­ess of environmen­tal, lifestyle and personal health changes in reducing mortality rates worldwide, they said

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