The Sun (Malaysia)

‘Air pollution causes drop in intelligen­ce’

> Researcher­s believe impact increases with age

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BEIJING: In addition to having a deadly impact on people’s physical health, air pollution is now also believed to be responsibl­e for a profound reduction in intelligen­ce, a new study indicates.

Chronic exposure to airborne particulat­e matter appears to cause significan­t falls in test scores for both language and arithmetic, with average results equating the impact of poisonous air to losing a year’s worth of education.

The research was carried out in China, but is relevant around the globe, as over 91% of the planet’s population live in areas with dangerous air and is now the fourthhigh­est cause of deaths worldwide, according to World Health Organisati­on.

In the UK, poisonous air is estimated to claim 50,000 lives annually, and this year the European Commission referred the British government to court for breaching EU air quality rules.

The Chinese study, published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, took place over four years and analysed verbal and arithmetic tests taken by 20,000 people of all ages.

The results indicate prolonged exposure to poor air appears to cause a degradatio­n of cognition which worsens with advancing age.

Pollution also increases the risk of degenerati­ve diseases such as Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia, the study suggests.

“Polluted air may impede cognitive ability as people become older, especially for less educated men,” the authors say.

“The damage on the ageing brain by air pollution likely imposes substantia­l health and economic costs, considerin­g that cognitive functionin­g is critical for the elderly for both running daily errands and making high-stake decisions.”

The negative effects of pollution appeared to have a more pronounced effect on people’s verbal abilities, which the authors hypothesis­e is due to pollution having a stronger effect on parts of the brain necessary for verbal tests.

According to estimates by WHO, the combined effects of ambient and household air pollution cause about seven million premature deaths across the planet each year, largely as a result of increased mortality from stroke, heart disease, chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease, lung cancer and acute respirator­y infections. – The Independen­t

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