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The Financial Express

Air pollution may harm cognitive intelligence, study says

| Updated: September 13, 2018 11:47:42


Photo: Collected Photo: Collected

Chronic exposure to air pollution can cause harm to cognitive performance, a new study in China reveals.

Researchers believe that the negative impact increases with age, and affects men with less education the worst.

Over four years, the maths and verbal skills of some 20,000 people in China were monitored by the US-Chinese study.

Researchers believe the results have global relevance, with more than 80 per cent of the world's urban population breathing unsafe levels of air pollution.

The study - which includes researchers from Beijing's Peking University and Yale University in the US - was based on measurements of sulphur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide and particulates smaller than 10 micrometres in diameter where participants lived. It is not clear how much each of these three pollutants is to blame.

Carbon monoxide, ozone and larger particulates were not included in the study.

Described as an invisible killer, air pollution causes an estimated seven million premature deaths a year worldwide, according to the World Health Organization.

"We provide evidence that the effect of air pollution on verbal tests becomes more pronounced as people age, especially for men and the less educated," the study published on Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences said.

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

"Our sample enables us to examine the impact of air pollution as people age. So our results across the life course are quite new," said one of the co-authors, Xi Chen of the Yale School of Public Health.

In this study, researchers tested people of both sexes aged 10 and above between 2010 and 2014, with 24 standardised maths questions and 34 word-recognition questions.

Previous studies found air pollution had a negative impact on students' cognitive abilities.

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Many pollutants are thought to directly affect brain chemistry in a variety of ways - for instance, particulate matter can carry toxins through small passageways and directly enter the brain.

Some pollutants can also have a psychological impact, increasing the risk of depression, reports BBC.

Some stats regarding air pollution around the world according to WHO:

  1. About seven million people die every year from exposure to polluted air
  2. Air pollution caused 4.2 million deaths globally in 2016
  3. 91 per cent of the world's population lives in places where air quality exceeds WHO guideline limits
  4. 14 Indian cities are among the world's 20 most polluted, with the northern city of Kanpur topping the list
  5. Nine out of 10 people in the world breathe polluted air

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