Are we in for a world of pain?
LISA SALMON finds out how pollution and climate change harms us, as well as the planet
WHAT climate change and air pollution are doing to our planet is frightening – but what they can do to our health is just as scary. The British Medical Association (BMA) has warned that climate change and air pollution are already damaging the health of the public – it has been estimated that outdoor air pollution kills 40,000 people in the UK alone every year.
And the World Health Organisation (WHO) stresses that air pollution and climate change are intertwined – for example, the shifts in weather patterns due to climate change can cause more ozone to be produced at ground level, which harms our health. Increased ozone levels then contribute to more warming.
“Climate change and air pollution are among the most serious health challenges we face this century,” says BMA board of science chair Professor Dame Parveen Kumar.
“We need to see bold and immediate action if we are to curb this dangerous threat.”
But exactly how are climate change and air pollution damaging our health?
Here the Royal College of Physicians and the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, outline 11 of the major health effects as detailed in their report, Every Breath We Take: The Lifelong Impact of Air Pollution.
PREMATURE BIRTH AND STILLBIRTH
WHEN pregnant women breathe in some pollutants, they can cross the placenta to the developing baby. Air pollution can affect growth of the unborn baby and may be linked to premature birth, which ich in some cases can lead to severe disability and d early death.
From the earliest stages of development, DNA is susceptible to changes arising from exposure to air pollution, and even seemingly trivial interference during critical development periods ds can harm a baby’s organs. It is also thought the exposure of pregnant women to traffic-related air pollution accounts for more than a fifth of all cases of low birth weight.
ADHD AND LOW IQ
CHILDREN are especially vulnerable to air pollution. Heavy metals, particularly lead and mercury, which can cross the placenta and accumulate in the foetus, have been associated with neurodevelopmental harm, leading to reduced cognitive function, lower IQ, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and possibly autism spectrum disorder during childhood.
ASTHMA AND CHILDHOOD RESPIRATORY ILLNESSES
THERE’S “compelling evidence” in children and adults that air pollution exposure is associated with new onset asthma. In the Californian Children’s Health Study, exposure to higher levels of nitrogen oxides was associated with the condition, and children living within 75m of a major road had a 29% increased risk of lifetime asthma. Also, traffic-related air pollutants near the home and school were associated with a 1.5-fold-increased risk of new-onset asthma. Pollen and other aeroallergen levels are also higher in extrem extreme heat, often cau caused by global wa warming. Such high ae aeroallergens can t trigger asthma a attacks.
Also, children li living in highly p polluted areas are fou four times more like likely to have reduced lung f function in adulth adulthood. Infants in areas with w high levels of particulate air pollution are at increased risk of death during their first year, particularly from respiratory illnesses.
CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE
STUDIES have shown significant associations between air pollution and a range of cardiovascular problems in adults.
Both short – and long-term exposure to air pollution can increase the risk of heart attacks, heart failure, arrhythmias (abnormal heart rhythms) and stroke in at-risk individuals, such as older people or those with pre-existing medical conditions.
Once people have a heart condition, spikes in air pollution can make their symptoms worse, leading to more hospital admissions and death.
CANCER
THE International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifies outdoor air pollution and particulate matter from it as carcinogenic to humans. It says there’s strong evidence that exposure to outdoor air pollution is associated with changes in gene expression and genetic damage, which are linked to increased cancer risk.
IARC also says there’s “sufficient evidence that exposure to outdoor air pollution causes lung cancer”.
OBESITY
RESEARCH suggests some air pollution may be connected to the development of obesity. Prenatal exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals, for example, has been reported to increase children’s risk of obesity.
Being overweight can also make people more vulnerable to the harmful effects of air pollution, while a diet rich in antioxidant nutrients, or which includes vitamin and mineral supplements, may give protection.
CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY DISEASE (COPD)
THERE’S evidence that long-term exposure to outdoor air pollution suppresses normal lung function growth in children, and accelerates lung function decline in adults.
COPD is common in the elderly, and often linked to smoking. Patients with COPD have a reduced ability to clear inhaled material from their lungs and may, as a result, get a higher dose of air pollution.
DEMENTIA
THE Alzheimer’s Society says the most convincing evidence linking air pollution to dementia comes from a 2016 study of 6.6 million people from Canada. It found those living within 50m of a major road were 7% more likely to develop dementia than people living more than 300m away, where fine particulate matter levels can be up to 10 times lower.
As there are other factors associated with living on a busy road, such as high noise pollution and stress, the Alzheimer’s Society points out that the study doesn’t prove air pollution causes dementia.
MENTAL HEALTH
MORE frequent and severe flooding is a result of climate change, and health experts are concerned about the effect on people’s mental health, with victims of the 2007 UK floods up to five times more likely to have symptoms of stress and anxiety.
SPREAD OF DISEASE
CHANGES in climate are likely to alter the geographic range of serious vector-borne diseases (which are transmitted to humans and other animals by arthropods like mosquitoes, ticks, and fleas) like malaria and dengue.
Climate change and air pollution are two of the most serious health challenges we face. We need to see bold action now Professor Dame Parveen Kumar, BMA board of science chair