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Study Shows Adverse Effects of Air Pollution on Births in Los Angeles County
FINDINGS:
Women who lived in regions with high carbon monoxide or fine-particle levels — pollution caused mainly by vehicle traffic — were approximately 10 to 25 percent more likely to have a preterm baby than women who lived in less polluted areas. This was especially true for women who breathed polluted air during the first trimester or during the last months and weeks of pregnancy.
IMPACT:
Air pollution in
AUTHORS:
Dr. Beate Ritz, professor of
epidemiology at the UCLA
JOURNAL:
The study appears in the American Journal of Epidemiology, online at http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/kwm181?ijkey=j6AzexduCMu2zhG&keytype=ref.
BACKGROUND:
The first large-scale air pollution study of its kind, this study collected detailed information on more than 2,500 women who gave birth in 2003. Through personal interviews, researchers were able to determine the risks due to air pollution separate from other risk factors, such as smoking, exposure to secondhand smoke and alcohol use.
FUNDING:
Funding from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, and partial funding from the Southern California Environmental Health Sciences Center, supported the research.
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