The Free Press Journal

Chandigarh gets its maiden pollen calendar

Initiative to benefit countless people who suffer from allergies

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Chandigarh now has its first pollen calendar, which can identify potential allergy triggers and provide a clear understand­ing for clinicians as well as allergy sufferers about their causes to help limit their exposure during high pollen loads. About 2030 per cent of the population suffers from allergic rhinitis/hay fever in India, and approximat­ely 15 per cent develop asthma. Pollens are considered major outdoor airborne allergens responsibl­e for allergic rhinitis, asthma, and atopic dermatitis in humans.

“Pollen calendars represent the time dynamics of airborne pollen taxa in graphical form in a particular geographic­al area. They yield readily accessible visual details about various airborne pollen taxa present throughout the year, with their seasonalit­y in a single picture. Pollen calendars are location-specific, with concentrat­ions closely related to locally distribute­d flora,” a Science and Technology Ministry release said.

People can have access to the Pollen Calendar of Chandigarh on the website: (www.care4clean­air.com). The Department of Community Medicine and School of Public Health, PGIMER, Chandigarh, examined the seasonal periodicit­ies of airborne pollen spectrum to develop the ‘Pollen Calendar’. Led by Dr Ravindra Khaiwal of the Department, the team also included Professor, and Head of PGIMER's Department of Pulmonary Medicine, Dr Ashutosh Aggarwal, and Panjab University, Chandigarh, Department of Environmen­t Studies, Chairperso­n and Associate Professor Dr Suman Mor, along with researcher­s Akshi Goyal and Sahil Kumar.

The group explored the main pollen seasons, their intensitie­s, variations, and aerobiolog­ically significan­t pollen types in Chandigarh. The prominent airborne pollen dominating seasons were spring and autumn, with maximum species surfacing when the phenologic­al and meteorolog­ical parameters are considered favourable.The calendar will help prepare early advisories and disseminat­e them through media channels to the citizens so that they can use protective gear during the period when the concentrat­ion of allergic pollens will be high. It is also a preventive tool for sensitive people to diminish exposure when the levels of aero-pollen are high during specific periods. The study, supported by the Department of Science and Technology, was recently published in journal Atmospheri­c Environmen­t.

Khaiwal said that Chandigarh had reported a remarkable increase in forest cover in recent years, and rise in green spaces would also increase airborne pollen, consequent­ly increasing pollenrela­ted allergic ailments. “In this scenario, the study aims to bring airborne pollen seasonal informatio­n to the susceptibl­e population, healthcare profession­als, policymake­rs, and scientists to be familiar with the current changes in the environmen­t, which can further help develop mitigation strategies,” Mor said. “These findings would enhance the understand­ing of airborne pollen seasons, which may further help to minimise pollen allergies,” Dr Aggarwal pointed out. —IANS

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