Air pollution results in mothers having smaller babies

07 Feb 2013

1

A worldwide study has shown that pregnant mothers exposed to air pollution emitted by vehicles and coal power plants, are significantly more likely to have smaller babies.

The study, the largest of its kind ever undertaken, analysed data from more than three million births in nine nations at 14 sites in the UK, Europe, North America, South America, Asia and Australia.

Publishing today in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, the researchers found the higher the level of pollution, the greater the rate of low birth weight.

Low birth weight is associated with serious health consequences, including increased risk of perinatal death, as well as ill health and chronic health problems in later life.

According to professor Tanja Pless-Mulloli, who led the UK arm of the study at Newcastle University,  ''As air pollution increases we can see that more babies are smaller at birth which in turn puts them at risk of poor health later in life.

''These microscopic particles, five times smaller than the width of a human hair, are part of the air we breathe every day. What we have shown definitively is that these levels are already having an effect on pregnant mothers.''

Latest articles

OpenClaw founder Peter Steinberger joins OpenAI as personal-agent project moves to foundation

OpenClaw founder Peter Steinberger joins OpenAI as personal-agent project moves to foundation

Fractal Analytics shares slip on debut as AI uncertainty weighs on sentiment

Fractal Analytics shares slip on debut as AI uncertainty weighs on sentiment

Warner Bros weighs reopening sale talks with Paramount amid competing bids

Warner Bros weighs reopening sale talks with Paramount amid competing bids

ByteDance pledges safeguards for Seedance AI after studios raise IP concerns

ByteDance pledges safeguards for Seedance AI after studios raise IP concerns

Musk ramps up SpaceX moon plans as Bezos accelerates Blue Origin in race against China

Musk ramps up SpaceX moon plans as Bezos accelerates Blue Origin in race against China

Indians can now travel to 56 destinations without prior visa as passport ranking improves

Indians can now travel to 56 destinations without prior visa as passport ranking improves

CEO says EU’s IRIS2 must match Starlink on price and performance

CEO says EU’s IRIS2 must match Starlink on price and performance

Applied Materials jumps 12% as AI chip demand drives strong revenue forecast

Applied Materials jumps 12% as AI chip demand drives strong revenue forecast

Opening the silos: India approves 3 million tonnes of wheat and product exports

Opening the silos: India approves 3 million tonnes of wheat and product exports