Stabroek News Sunday

Child asthma cases linked to cities’ dirty air

-

(SciDev.Net) - Reducing air pollution should be a crucial part of health strategies for children, as nitrogen dioxide (NO2) — a harmful pollutant emitted from burning fossil fuels — may lead to nearly 2 million new child asthma cases a year, research suggests.

The study, published this month in The Lancet Planetary Health, highlights rising NO2 pollution levels in urban areas in South Asia and SubSaharan Africa, where it suggests child asthma is a serious health concern.

Researcher­s from George Washington University in the US say it is the first study to estimate the global burden of asthma cases in children resulting from NO2 emissions in more than 13,000 cities.

“Our study found that nitrogen dioxide puts children at risk of developing asthma and the problem is especially acute in urban areas,” said Susan Anenberg, study co-author and a professor of environmen­tal and occupation­al health at the university, in Washington DC.

Asthma affects around 262 million people worldwide, according to the 2019 Global Burden of Disease study, and is the most common chronic disease among children, causing inflammati­on of the lung’s airways.

However, reliable data is still lacking on the condition. Most asthma-related deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries where it is often underdiagn­osed and under-treated, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

NO2 is formed by the burning of fossil fuels such as oil and gas and is mainly emitted by vehicles, industry, agricultur­al machinery, and power plants.

By analysing ground concentrat­ion of NO2 and new cases of asthma in children from 2000 to 2019, researcher­s observed that, in 2019, an estimated 1.85 million new cases of childhood asthma were attributab­le to NO2 worldwide, and two thirds of these cases (1.22 million) were in urban areas.

NO2 pollution has been increasing in South Asia,

Sub-Saharan Africa, and the Middle East, the researcher­s found, while air quality has shown improvemen­ts in Europe and the US. Explaining the connection between NO2 and childhood asthma, the researcher­s said: “NO2 itself has been associated with adverse health outcomes including asthma exacerbati­on. Epidemiolo­gical studies have also found associatio­ns between transporta­tionrelate­d air pollutants [such as NO2] and new onset asthma in children.”

According to the researcher­s, some studies indicated that pollutants such as NO2 cause inflammati­on and changes in airways due to oxidative stress, sometimes resulting in asthma.

“The findings suggest that clean air must be a critical part of strategies aimed at keeping children healthy,” said Anenberg.

A review published in 2019 in the journal Environmen­t Internatio­nal highlights possible measures to combat NO2 pollution, such as “a ventilatio­n strategy with suitable filters…ventilatin­g windows or intakes; traffic planning (location and density); and reducing the use of NO2-releasing indoor sources.”

Stanley Szefler, director of the Pediatric Asthma Research Program at the Breathing Institute of Children’s Hospital Colorado, US, who was not involved in the Washington DC study, told SciDev.Net: “The report by Anenberg and colleagues reinforces the role of air pollution on paediatric

asthma incidence and supports the role of public health and environmen­tal control stakeholde­rs…to speak for clean air measures.

“Furthermor­e, the report suggests that monitoring environmen­tal levels of nitric dioxide could serve as a surrogate marker [an indicator of a disease state] for regions of high risk for increased childhood asthma incidence as well as an indicator of the efficacy of mitigation measures for air pollution.”

Szefler was the lead author of a study published in 2020 in the journal Pediatric Pulmonolog­y. It advocated for “a worldwide charter” on child asthma that would act as a roadmap for “better education and training”.

“The charter indicated that asthma guidelines alone are insufficie­nt and need supplement­ing by government support, changes in policy, access to diagnosis and effective therapy for all children, with research to improve implementa­tion,” Szefler added.

Sushmita Roychowdhu­ry, director of pulmonolog­y at Fortis Hospital, in Kolkata, India, says that paediatric asthma is becoming more common in highly populated cities.

“Children living in high-rises close to the main busy arterial roads are found to have more symptoms early on,” she said. “Most children in urban India waiting for school buses in the morning or those taking public transport are exposed to high concentrat­ions of pollutants.”

 ?? ?? A child in Cambodia getting asthma treatment using an inhaler. A study has highlighte­d rising nitrogen dioxide pollution levels as a leading cause of child asthma in urban areas in South Asia and SubSaharan Africa. Copyright: PICRYL, Public domain image.
A child in Cambodia getting asthma treatment using an inhaler. A study has highlighte­d rising nitrogen dioxide pollution levels as a leading cause of child asthma in urban areas in South Asia and SubSaharan Africa. Copyright: PICRYL, Public domain image.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana