Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Olympic pollution controls linked to birth weight boost

- By Jonathan Kaiman Tribune Newspapers

NEW YORK — Exposure to air pollution may reduce the weight of newborn children, according to scientists who studied birth weights in Beijing before, during and after the 2008 Summer Olympic Games, when Chinese government controls temporaril­y reduced the city’s often-hazardous smog levels.

In a study released last week in the journal Environmen­tal Health Perspectiv­es, an internatio­nal team of researcher­s compiled informatio­n on births from 83,672 mothers across four Beijing districts. The study says women who were eight months pregnant during the 2008 Olympics, which ran Aug. 8-24, gave birth to children who were on average 23 grams heavier than infants born during the same period in 2007 and 2009.

“We think pollution has an effect on birth weight,” said David Rich, an epidemiolo­gist at the University of Rochester and the study’s lead author. “And the next question is: By what mechanisms? It’s not just one study that’ll answer that. It’ll be a lot of work by a lot of different people.”

The study’s authors included scientists at Capital Medical University and the Chinese Research Academy of Environmen­tal Sciences in Beijing, and others at Rutgers University, the University of California at San Francisco and Duke University.

China is only beginning to understand the longterm effects of its air, water and soil pollution, the products of three decades of unchecked economic growth. Air pollution, which manifests in a toxic smog perenniall­y engulfing most major Chinese cities, accounted for 1.2 million premature deaths nationwide in 2010, according to a study in the British medical journal Lancet.

China’s pollution controls during the Olympics included restrictin­g cars, halting constructi­on, shut- tering factories and seeding clouds to adjust the city’s weather patterns.

In March, Chinese President Xi Jinping promised to crack down on polluters with an “iron fist.” Last spring, Premier Li Keqiang vowed to wage “war against pollution.”

Yet analysts have still found a discrepanc­y between the government’s rhetoric and the country’s smog-choked reality.

Chinese researcher­s gathered data from 360 Chinese cities and found that 90 percent of them failed to reach the government’s air quality standards during the first three months of 2015, according to a report released April 21by the environmen­tal nonprofit Greenpeace.

Levels of airborne particles less than 2.5 micrometer­s in diameter, small enough to lodge themselves deep within the lungs, dropped in Beijing over the last year, while conditions in cities across China’s central and western provinces worsened, Greenpeace found.

“Our analysis shows that the government’s strict pollution control measures are working, at least enough to record a modest improvemen­t on last year in certain cities such as Beijing,” Zhang Kai, climate and energy campaigner at Greenpeace East Asia, said in a statement.

 ?? ED JONES/GETTY-AFP ?? A mother and child wear face masks in pollution-heavy Beijing. China, which hosted the 2008 Olympics, is grappling with the long-term effects of air, water and soil pollution.
ED JONES/GETTY-AFP A mother and child wear face masks in pollution-heavy Beijing. China, which hosted the 2008 Olympics, is grappling with the long-term effects of air, water and soil pollution.

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