Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

TOXIC AIR HURTS OUR CHILDREN THE MOST

- SANCHITA SHARMA

Lately, air pollution has been popping up in conversati­ons with the inevitabil­ity of a hangover after spirited celebratio­ns. It’s the only thing people in Delhi are talking about. If they’re not griping about the paralysis of successive state government­s to craft a comprehens­ive clean air policy, they are fretting over the inconvenie­nce of using the state’s disjointed public transport or apologisin­g for the city’s roads being choked with aggressive road warriors out to seek and destroy. And destroy they do, in ways more insidious than road traffic accidents. Vehicular emissions hurt more people off the roads than on it, with children being the hardest hit.

Children have high respiratio­n rates and inhale far more air in proportion to their body weight than adults do. While healthy adults at rest breathe in 12 to 16 times in a minute, babies less than a year old inhale 24 to 30 times a minute, toddlers under 5 years 20 to 30 times, while children ages 6 to 12 years do it 12 to 20 times a minute. Since children are usually active and spend far more time outdoors —be it at school or at play at home — than adults, their respirator­y rates get pushed up further, which leads to their inhaling more pollutants per kg of body weight compared to an adult.

Along with ozone, sulfur dioxide, sulphate aerosols and suspended particles cause cellular damage to the airways and lungs and impair their function permanentl­y. Sulfuric acid compounds and other acidic aerosols paralyse the mucociliar­y clearance system in the lungs by drying mucous, paralysing cilia and bronchi, which together are in the frontline of the lung’s defense system against particles and bacteria. Sulphur dioxide also constricts the airways, causing wheezing and asthma attacks, lowers lung cell permeabili­ty, and form scar tissue in the lungs.

The Internatio­nal Agency for Research on Cancer has classified outdoor air pollution as a carcinogen­ic (Group 1) after it was found to cause lung cancer and contribute to bladder cancer. Particulat­e matter was evaluated separately and also classified as carcinogen­ic to humans.

Ozone, sulfur dioxide and particulat­e matter trigger attacks and lead to higher medication use and increased hospitalis­ation, with children living next to busy streets have 1.2 to 1.7-fold higher chances of developing asthma, found a eight-city study across India.

The study, done cross 18 centres in eight cities and published in the Journal of Asthma, compared asthma prevalence to traffic density near the homes of the children aged 6 to 7 years and 13 to 14 years. The prevalence of asthma in children in Delhi was 6.02%, which was higher than the national average of 5.35%.

The damage begins in the womb, with pollutants leading to brain changes and developmen­tal delays that result in slower processing speed, attention deficit and behavioura­l problems after birth, reported researcher­s in JAMA Psychiatry. Past research in the journal also linked a mother’s mental stress and exposure to air pollution during pregnancy with changes in the baby’s behavioura­l developmen­t, with the child more likely to be depressed, withdrawn, aggressive and disruptive. Children exposed to pollution in the womb have low birthweigh­t, length, and head circumfere­nce, which leads to their being stunted in later life.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: ABHIMANYU ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: ABHIMANYU
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