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Air Pollution May Affect Every Organ, Cell in The Body
Air Pollution May Affect Every Organ, Cell in The Body
From VOA Learning English, this is the Health & Lifestyle report.
Taking a long, deep breath is good for both our bodies and minds. It supplies
necessary oxygen to our blood and can help to create emotional calm.
However, calm and oxygen are not the only things a deep breath brings. In
many parts of the world, a deep breath also brings pollutants into our bodies.
For many people around the world, breathing polluted air has become the new
“normal.” On its website, The World Health Organization warns that “91%
percent of the world’s population lives in places where air quality exceeds
WHO guideline limits.”
On its website, WHO experts say that air pollution kills "an estimated 7
million people worldwide every year." It says about 4 million deaths are linked
to outdoor air pollution and about 3 million deaths are linked to inside air
pollution, also called "household air pollution." The WHO adds that air
pollution harms billions more.
Perhaps not surprisingly, cities are especially bad. Over 80% of people who
live in urban areas, the WHO reports, are breathing levels of air pollution that
are unhealthy.
Because we breathe in air pollution, we may think that it only affects the
human breathing system. But research shows that the mouth, nose, throat and
lungs are not the only body parts affected by air pollution.
Many in the scientific community say that PM2.5 can affect every organ and
every cell in our body. Researchers have found that PM2.5 can even pass
through the barrier that protects our brains. It can also reach the placenta. So,
even in the womb, a fetus is not safe from air pollution.
The WHO reports that air pollution causes 24% of deaths from brain attacks
called strokes. The UN agency adds that 25% of all heart disease is from air
pollution.
Earlier this year, the FIRS Environmental Committee published two reports in
the February 2019 American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST). They detail
the effects of air pollution on health and evidence for its link to many diseases.
Dr. Dean Schraufnagel was the lead investigator. Following the publication of
the reports he said, “It is well-known that air pollution is a major
contributor to lung disease, but this review also shows how it can damage
most other organ systems of the body.”
The FIRS researchers also found air pollution to be “harmful to the aging
brain.”
They reported that older adults with heavy exposure to air pollution
performed poorly on tests of brain operations. They said this group showed an
increased risk of dementia compared to adults with less exposure.
The reports add that air pollution weakens bones so they break more easily.
Air pollution also ages our skin, hurts our eyes and interferes with sleep. It
affects the kidneys. And the researchers said living near busy roadways might
lead to liver disease.
Researchers at the WHO say that in 2016 about 600,000 children under the
age of five died from disease linked to air pollution.
Indoor cooking plays a part, as some families use unsafe fuels for cooking and
keeping warm. Experts at the WHO say that there are “3.8 million deaths
every year as a result of household exposure to smoke from dirty cook-stoves
and fuels.”
Experts say governments need to take the lead in fighting air pollution health
risks.
Dr. Schraufnagel adds that “the best way to reduce exposure to air pollution is
to control it at its source.” He explains that governments need to do this by
setting pollution “standards and regulatory processes.”
Anna Matteo wrote this piece for VOA Learning English. Caty Weaver was
the editor.
particulate matter – n. the term for a mixture of solid particles and liquid
droplets found in the air.
womb – n. the organ in women and some female animals in which babies
develop before birth
regulatory – adj. making or concerned with making official rules about what
is acceptable in a particular business, activity, etc.