Guest guest Posted June 3, 2006 Report Share Posted June 3, 2006 Death in the air London Free Press - Canada Sat, June 3, 2006 http://lfpress.ca/newsstand/News/Local/2006/06/03/1612452-sun.html We're learning more and more about how smog damages our health - even when the air seems clean. Experts conclude no amount of air pollution is safe. By MEGAN GILLIS, SUN MEDIA Take a deep breath before you read this. That gulp was just one of thousands of litres of air you'll breathe today -- indoors and out. You may not want to take another after you read this -- because the air we breathe outdoors is taking lives. It damages our lungs and hearts, brings on asthma bouts and heart attacks and leaves people with such ailments as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease struggling just to breathe. Summer hasn't even begun and London has already had 19 days when air quality was one category below that when a smog day is declared -- a level at which very sensitive people may be adversely affected. Last year, pollutants led officials to issue 12 smog advisories covering 45 days; on one of those days, air quality was actually rated poor. For the first time since measurements were taken, a smog advisory was issued in the winter. It's not that air pollution is getting worse. Generally -- except for lung-irritating ground-level ozone -- it's better than three decades ago. Experts say we have more smog days because of variations in weather - - hot summers cook up more smog, for example. What's changed is we're learning more and more about how smog damages our health -- even when the air seems clean. Experts conclude no amount of air pollution is safe. " It's a fundamental determinant of health -- people can't be healthy unless they have clean air to breathe, " says Dr. Greg Flynn, president of the Ontario Medical Association. " You have a choice of whether to smoke or not smoke, exercise or not exercise. You don't have a choice about the air we breathe. " The association projected the costs of air pollution to make the impact clear. It estimated air pollution would kill 230 people in London and Middlesex County last year, hospitalize 690, send 2,350 to the ER and cause more than 1.3 million days of missed work. The tab for the added health-care costs and lost productivity would top $40 million, the association says. Those numbers, which the OMA calls conservative, are expected to nearly double in London and Middlesex County by 2026 -- even if air pollution gets no worse -- because more of us will be old and frail. The vast majority who will die are the most vulnerable -- the elderly and ill. Researchers believe babies and children with health problems are at risk of dying, too. There just isn't enough research to predict how many. " We're getting used to looking through a haze, " Flynn says. " We're trying to make it real to people and help governments understand the cost -- a billion dollars a year -- and the human suffering. Thousands, probably millions, of people in Ontario have minor health effects on a daily basis from air pollution. " The doctors' study is one of three Canadian reports that came up with similar death tolls by combining research on the health effects of pollutants, data from air quality monitoring stations and population statistics. It's the same way experts made us wake up and realize the terrible human cost of smoking. A Health Canada study was even grimmer than the OMA's, estimating the five common air pollutants -- carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide, sulphur dioxide, ozone and fine particulate matter -- kill 5,900 people a year in eight big Canadian cities, including two that flank London -- Windsor and Hamilton. The air is making people sick even when it looks clear. A Toronto study found more than nine in 10 premature deaths and hospitalizations caused by pollution occurred when the air was good or very good, according to the air quality index. Scientists and doctors have long known smog kills. More than 4,000 died in London, England, in 1952 when cold weather increased coal burning and stagnant air kept the toxic haze over the city. In response, countries such as Canada tightened air pollution standards in the 1950s and 1960s. Scientists thought when the worst pollution disappeared in the 1970s and 1980s, so would the health damage. They were wrong. " The new studies have demonstrated that even at those lower levels of exposure, we see adverse health effects, " says Dr. Dave Stieb, of Health Canada's air health effects division. " It's a change in perspective. Things aren't safe -- even at these lower levels. " We know air pollution outside is harming our health. In a Healthy Indoors survey last summer, six in 10 said air pollution is the gravest environmental threat facing Canadians -- and will continue to be. More than half thought it would hurt their health and nearly four in 10 said it already had. What we may not know is that even our homes are no safe refuge. Experts say the air inside our ever-tighter homes is just as serious a threat to our health, potentially full of pollutants that trigger asthma and allergies in kids and cause respiratory problems, cancer and even fatal poisoning. " You're more likely to be affected by pollutants indoors than outdoors, " says Jay Kassirer, executive director of the Healthy Indoors Partnership, formed by groups to fight inaction on indoor air. " Canadians have the impression indoor air is better than outdoor air -- for a number of substances, it's not, " Kassirer says. " In terms of pollution that will have an impact on people's health, one is more likely to be exposed indoors than outdoors because we spend so much time indoors and we're closer to the sources. " Yet many indoor environments in Canada are just as polluted as 30 years ago, despite decades of reports and conferences. Canadians don't see the air they breathe at home as a threat. Almost three-quarters of people surveyed for Healthy Indoors reported potential health threats in their homes. Nearly one in 10 families with children, for example, had visible mould. Only a third recognized the threat to their health. " Over 73 per cent of people reported signs of potential health risks -- only half took action, " Kassirer says. The science -- and funding for research and action -- in indoor air quality has lagged when compared to the air outside. " This is a very similar situation to climate change 10 years ago, " Kassirer says. " People are saying the evidence points to real issues, but people say the science isn't very hard yet. " No one knows, for example, how many people are sickened and die because of the air indoors, because there's no way to measure pollution in all the dwellings in a city such as London. But there's a lot scientists do know about indoor air threats that isn't reaching the public. A lung association review of studies links indoor air pollutants to a string of ailments -- from difficult breathing and wheezing to asthma, respiratory infections, bronchitis and lung cancer. " People know a lot about outdoor air quality, they listen to smog warnings, but their basements are full of mould, " says Dr. Virginia Salares, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.'s indoor air researcher. " They're not attuned to the environment where they're spending more time relative to the outdoors. The consensus is there is a strong relationship between indoor air quality and health. " Smoking, for example, is linked to upper respiratory effects in children. Carbon monoxide from a poorly maintained furnace is poisoning -- it can be fatal. Dust mites and asthma -- it's a powerful link. It's only in our homes we cover up health threats with more pollution, Salares says, pointing to air fresheners used to mask the smell of potentially dangerous mould. A KILLER The Ontario Medical Association estimates air pollution killed 5,800 people in the province last year, sent thousands to the emergency room and cost billions. It predicts more than 10,000 will die in 2026 -- even if our air gets no dirtier. The annual toll of pollution coming from the U.S. -- ozone and fine particulate matter -- in Ontario is estimated at: - 2,751 deaths a year. - 12,000 hospital admissions. - 22,000 emergency room visits. - 4.8 million minor illnesses. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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