PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study reveals large and unequal health burden from air pollution in California's Bay Area

Results underscore need for urgent action to reduce air pollution, particularly in overburdened areas

Study reveals large and unequal health burden from air pollution in California's Bay Area
2021-03-31
(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON (March 31, 2021)-- New research published today in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives from Environmental Defense Fund and the George Washington University shows air pollution takes an enormous toll on health in the San Francisco Bay Area, and the impacts vary dramatically within neighborhoods. The magnitude of the health burden from pollution demonstrates the need for urgent action to cut air pollution and protect health, particularly in areas facing the highest impacts.

The analysis estimated that exposure to particle pollution (soot) resulted in more than 3,000 deaths and 5,500 new childhood asthma cases every year in the Bay Area. Exposure to the traffic-related pollutant nitrogen dioxide also had alarming health impacts, resulting in more than 2,500 deaths and 5,200 new childhood asthma cases every year. While the impacts of these pollutants are not additive, the findings illustrate the massive harm caused by air pollution to adults and children in cities.

These health impacts vary dramatically from street-to-street, and some communities experience a much larger burden. In certain areas, death rates resulting from pollution are more than 30 times higher than in others. And for asthma, while traffic-related air pollution accounts for an average of 1 in 5 new childhood asthma cases across the Bay Area, pollution is responsible for up to 1 in 2 cases in some areas.

Further, using this analysis, Environmental Defense Fund found stark racial disparities in the impacts of air pollution. Specifically, neighborhoods with higher percentages of people of color face, on average, double the rate of pollution-related childhood asthma compared to predominantly white neighborhoods.

"Despite major improvements in air quality in the United States over the last 50 years, air quality has not improved equitably," Susan Anenberg, an associate professor at the George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health and corresponding author on the study, said. "Increasing availability of data on air pollution levels and disease rates at the neighborhood scale can help us take action to reduce those inequities."

This health impact assessment makes visible the cumulative impacts of pollution and health disparities at a hyperlocal scale by using air pollution data from street-level mobile monitoring and satellites, combined with local population and health information. These methods can be used in other cities worldwide to evaluate the impacts of air pollution and identify areas to target mitigation efforts where they will have the largest health benefit.

By using local air and health data, this analysis revealed large disparities in the health impacts of air pollution and identified hotspots of impacts that would not have otherwise been recognized. Specifically, using less-detailed health data underestimated the deaths attributed to pollution by up to 50% in Oakland compared to data that captured health disparities within the city. This could have important implications for decision-makers seeking to allocate resources equitably or target areas for air pollution mitigation, particularly because typical health impact assessments do not use local health and air data.

"We find local level datasets, such as the Google Street View measurements and local level rates of disease, help us determine which neighborhoods are at greatest risk," Veronica Southerland, a PhD candidate at the George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health and lead author on the study, said. "Without using these datasets, we might miss important disparities in the health burden of air pollution."

This research, supported in part by a NASA grant, builds on Environmental Defense Fund's previous work with Google Earth Outreach and other partners in Oakland, which deployed Google Street View cars to create a large, spatially precise dataset of mobile air pollution measurements within Oakland. This latest research shows how pollution can contribute to health disparities, as it disproportionately impacts neighborhoods burdened by existing health conditions.

"Across the world, people living in cities - from the young to the elderly - are impacted by air pollution. But we know that this harm is not equally distributed," Ananya Roy, Senior Health Scientist at Environmental Defense Fund and a co-author on the study, said. "This study develops methods and shines a light on the major disparities in air pollution's impacts on communities at an unprecedented block by block scale, providing actionable information for decision-makers and advocates."

INFORMATION:

Learn more about the assessment and explore the disparities in air pollution's impact on childhood asthma in EDF's new interactive maps.

-GW-


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Study reveals large and unequal health burden from air pollution in California's Bay Area

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Thermal power nanogenerator created without solid moving parts

Thermal power nanogenerator created without solid moving parts
2021-03-31
WASHINGTON, March 31, 2021 -- As environmental and energy crises become increasingly more common occurrences around the world, a thermal energy harvester capable of converting abundant thermal energy -- such as solar radiation, waste heat, combustion of biomass, or geothermal energy -- into mechanical energy appears to be a promising energy strategy to mitigate many crises. The majority of thermal power generation technologies involve solid moving parts, which can reduce their reliability and lead to frequent maintenance. This inspired researchers in China to develop a thermal power nanogenerator without solid moving parts. In Applied Physics Letters, from ...

Why SARS-CoV-2 replicates better in the upper respiratory tract

Why SARS-CoV-2 replicates better in the upper respiratory tract
2021-03-31
"SARS-CoV-2 and SARS-CoV are highly similar genetically, generate a homologous repertoire of viral proteins, and use the same receptor to infect human cells. However, despite these similarities, there are also important differences between the two viruses", says Ronald Dijkman from the Institute for Infectious Diseases (IFIK) at the University of Bern. For example, SARS-CoV infection is characterized by severe disease and inflammation in the lower respiratory tract and infected individuals are only contagious after the onset of symptoms, making it easier to identify and interrupt infection chains. In contrast, SARS-CoV-2 preferentially replicates in the upper airways (nasal cavity, pharynx, trachea) and can be efficiently transmitted ...

Study: Firms recruit dark personalities for earnings management

2021-03-31
Companies could be hiring that bad boss on purpose. According to new research in the Journal of Business Ethics, the "dark" personality traits - questionable ethical standards, narcissistic tendencies - that make a boss bad also make that person much more likely to go along with manipulating earnings and may be the reason they got the job in the first place. Co-authors Nick Seybert (University of Maryland's Robert H. Smith School of Business), Ling Harris (University of Nebraska-Lincoln), Scott Jackson (University of South Carolina) and Joel Owens (Portland State University) studied the process of hiring executive ...

For people with dementia in assisted living, quality of life improves with mindful care

2021-03-31
ATLANTA -- Assisted living communities can improve the quality of life for residents with dementia by approaching them as individuals and attempting to include all residents in activities, according to a study led by a Georgia State University gerontology researcher. The typical "activity programming" at many assisted living residences can leave people with dementia on the sidelines, according to the study, "Meaningful Engagement Among Assisted Living Residents With Dementia: Successful Approaches," published in the Journal of Applied Gerontology. The study found that the keys to improving ...

Field hospitals: The role of an academic medical center

2021-03-31
ANN ARBOR--By April last year, up to 28 free-standing alternate care sites ranging in size from 50 to 3,000 beds were underway or finished in the U.S.--the Michigan Medicine Field Hospital among them. This 500-bed alternate care site was planned and construction underway from March through May to meet the estimated surge in COVID-19 patients, expected to overrun hospitals nationwide and in Michigan. Sue Anne Bell, assistant professor of nursing and a disaster expert, was one of the field hospital's five-member leadership team. Bell and her ...

Study finds that masks make little difference to facial identification

2021-03-31
But the study also shows for the first time that performance may be improved by using super recognisers - people who are very skilled at recognising faces. It also reveals that masks do make recognising someone's emotions more difficult. There are many questions surrounding face masks and the impact that masks will have on face identification. Can we recognise the faces of people who we know well if they are wearing a mask? And, relevant to policing and security scenarios or a supermarket ID check, can an unfamiliar face be recognized across images if it is masked? And how do masks impact our ability to recognize a person's emotions? Dr Noyes is Senior Lecturer in Cognitive Psychology and conducted the study, published by the Royal ...

Studies of U.S. national parks focused on popular parks, trending down

2021-03-31
Research conducted in U.S. national parks has focused largely on five iconic parks, with more than a third of academic papers focused on Yellowstone National Park, researchers from North Carolina State University found in a new analysis. They also found that the number of publications per year increased during the 1990s and 2000s, but has dropped since 2013. The findings, published in the journal Conservation Science and Practice, were drawn from an analysis of nearly 7,000 published, peer-reviewed studies conducted at U.S. designated national parks since 1970. "Looking at the data was a surprise and perhaps a wake-up call," said the study's lead author Jelena Vukomanovic, assistant professor of ...

Kuroshio current may be responsible for climatic discomfort in Tokyo, scientists find

Kuroshio current may be responsible for climatic discomfort in Tokyo, scientists find
2021-03-31
Forty million people living in the Kanto region of Japan, which includes Tokyo, may be able to blame a meandering ocean current for increasing hot and humid summers, according to an analysis conducted by an international team of researchers. The Kuroshio Current flows north, bringing warm water from the tropics to Japan's southern coast. Since 2017, however, it has meandered off its traditional path, turning south before continuing north again. Now, scientists have found that the "large meander" is responsible for the uptick in humidity and temperature. The researchers, from Tohoku University in Japan and the University of Hawaii in the United States, published ...

How Streptococcus pyogenes can survive on skin and cause skin infections

How Streptococcus pyogenes can survive on skin and cause skin infections
2021-03-31
Osaka, Japan - Streptococcus pyogenes is one of the most important bacterial causes of human skin infections. If S. pyogenes invades deep into the tissue, it can cause life-threatening illnesses, such as sepsis and toxic shock. With its limited supply of carbohydrates, the skin is generally an effective barrier against infection and not a good surface for the survival of S. pyogenes. To survive successfully and invade deep into the tissue, bacteria must be able to find a source of nutrients and also evade the skin's immune defenses. Now, an international ...

Curved plasmonic fluxes reveal new way to practical light manipulation within nanoscal

2021-03-31
Scientists from Tomsk Polytechnic University jointly with Russian colleagues and researchers from Technical University of Denmark the first time have experimentally proved the existence of a two-dimensional (2D) curved flux of plasmonic quasiparticles, a plasmonic hook. A flat 2D hook is smaller than a 3D hook and possesses new properties, due to them, the researchers consider it as the most promising transmitter in high-speed microoptical circuits. The research findings are published in Applied Physics Letters (IF: 3,597; Q1) academic journal. Electrons transmit information in existing calculation devices. The scientists suppose if electrons are replaced ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Leaf color mysteries unveiled: the role of BoYgl-2 in cabbage

NUS Medicine study: Inability of cells to recycle fats can spell disease

D2-GCN: a graph convolutional network with dynamic disentanglement for node classification

Female hoverflies beat males on long-distance migrations

Study finds consumer openness to smoke-impacted wines, offering new market opportunities

Why we need to expand the search for climate-friendly microalgae

Fewer forest fires burn in North America today than in the past—and that's a bad thing

Older people in England are happier now than before the COVID pandemic, new national study suggests

Texas A&M chemist wins NSF CAREER Award

Micro-nano plastics make other pollutants more dangerous to plants and intestinal cells

Study of female genital tract reveals key findings

Pitt Engineering Professor Fang Peng elected to National Academy of Engineering

Short-course radiation therapy effective for endometrial cancer patients

Breast cancer treatment advances with light-activated ‘smart bomb’

JSCAI article at THT 2025 sets the standard for training pathways in interventional heart failure

Engineering biological reaction crucibles to rapidly produce proteins

Minecraft: a gamechanger for children’s learning

Presidential awards spotlight naval research excellence

SETI Institute names first Frank Drake Postdoctoral Fellow

From photons to protons: Argonne team makes breakthrough in high-energy particle detection

Cancer’s ripple effect may promote blood clot formation in the lungs

New UVA clinical trial explores AI-powered insulin delivery for better diabetes care

New technology could quash QR code phishing attacks

Study reveals direct gut-brain communication via vagus nerve

MSU expert: Using light to hear biology 

“I can’t hear you, I’m too stressed”: Repeated stress in mice reduces sound perception

Chronic stress affects how brain processes sound in mice

Insilico Medicine announces developmental candidate benchmarks and timelines for novel therapeutics discovered using generative AI

A wealth of evidence: PIK compiles 85,000 individual studies about climate policy

New fish species with ‘face paint’ named after Studio Ghibli character

[Press-News.org] Study reveals large and unequal health burden from air pollution in California's Bay Area
Results underscore need for urgent action to reduce air pollution, particularly in overburdened areas