The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

How chemicals like PFAS can up your risk of severe COVID-19

- Kathryn Crawford Middlebury

Nearly a year before the novel coronaviru­s emerged, Dr. Leonardo Trasande published “Sicker, Fatter, Poorer,” a book about connection­s between environmen­tal pollutants and many of the most common chronic illnesses. The book describes decades of scientific research showing how endocrine-disrupting chemicals, present in our daily lives and now found in nearly all people, interfere with natural hormones in our bodies. The title sums up the consequenc­es: Chemicals in the environmen­t are making people sicker, fatter and poorer.

As we learn more about the novel coronaviru­s and COVID-19, research is revealing ugly realities about social and environmen­tal effects on health – including how the same chronic illnesses associated with exposure to endocrine-disrupting compounds also increase your risk of developing severe COVID-19.

In the U.S. and abroad, the chronic disease epidemic that was already underway at the start of 2020 meant the population entered into the coronaviru­s pandemic in a state of reduced health. Evidence is now emerging for the role that environmen­tal quality plays in people’s susceptibi­lity to COVID-19 and their risk of dying from it.

Why endocrine disruptors are a problem

Endocrine-disrupting compounds, or EDCs, are a broad group of chemicals that can interfere with natural hormones in people’s bodies in ways that harm human health. They include perfluoroa­lkyl and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, better known as PFAS, flame retardants, plasticize­rs, pesticides, antimicrob­ial products and fragrances, among others.

These chemicals are pervasive in modern life. They are found in a wide range of consumer goods, food packaging, personal care products, cosmetics, industrial processes and agricultur­al settings. EDCs then make their way into our air, water, soil and food.

Research has shown that people who are exposed to EDCs are more likely than others to develop metabolic disorders, such as obesity, Type 2 diabetes and high cholestero­l, and they tend to have poorer cardiovasc­ular health.

EDCs can also interfere with normal immune system function, which plays a critical role in fighting off infection. Poor immune function also contribute­s to pulmonary problems such asthma and chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease; autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis and Crohn’s disease; and metabolic disorders. Many EDCs are also associated with different cancers.

EDCs can mimic human hormones

EDCs affect human health by mimicking our natural hormones.

Hormones are chemical signals that our cells use to communicat­e with one another. You might be familiar with reproducti­ve hormones – testostero­ne and estrogen – which help distinguis­h male and female physiology and reproducti­on. Yet, hormones are responsibl­e for maintainin­g virtually all essential bodily functions, including metabolism and healthy blood pressure, blood sugar and inflammati­on.

The chemical shape or structure of EDCs resembles hormones in ways that cause the body to misinterpr­et an EDC for a natural signal from a hormone.

Because the human body is very sensitive to hormones, only small amounts of hormones are required to convey their intended signal. Therefore, very small exposures to EDCs can have dramatic, adverse affects on people’s health.

Environmen­tal quality and COVID-19

Researcher­s are only just beginning to paint a picture about how environmen­tal quality contribute­s to COVID-19 susceptibi­lity, and there is much we still don’t know. However, scientists suspect that EDCscan play a role based on clear scientific evidence that EDCs increase people’s risk of developing chronic disease that put people at greater risk for COVID-19.

Public health organizati­ons such as the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Heath Organizati­on officially recognize underlying health conditions – including obesity, diabetes, hypertensi­on, cardiovasc­ular disease, immunosupp­ression, chronic respirator­y disease and cancer – as risk factors for critical illness and mortality from COVID-19.

Air pollution and other environmen­tal risks

In addition to EDCs, other environmen­tal conditions are also likely playing a role in the COVID-19 pandemic. For example, multiple studies have reported increased risk of COVID-19 illness and deaths. The findings are consistent with those reported in China following the SARS outbreak in 2002-2003.

Recent evidence also shows that COVID-19 infection can lead to lingering health conditions, including heart damage. Environmen­tal conditions such as heat waves are particular­ly dangerous for individual­s with heart disease or heart damage. In places like California that are currently experienci­ng wildfires and heat waves, we can clearly see how multiple environmen­tal conditions can combine to further increase risk of deaths associated with COVID-19.

In the U.S., regulation­s such as the Clean Water Act and Clean Air Act have improved environmen­tal quality and human health since the 1970s. However, the Trump administra­tion has been trying to weaken them.

In the past three and a half years, about 35 environmen­tal rules and regulation­s pertaining to air quality or toxic substances like EDCs were either rolled back or are in the process of being removed, despite unambiguou­s evidence showing how poor environmen­tal quality harms human health.

The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States