Date: Mon, 08 Oct 2001 00:20:30 -0700
   From: radtimes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Study: Pollution Is Killing Many

Study: Pollution Is Killing Many

The Associated Press
Aug 16 2001

WASHINGTON (AP) - More people are being killed by pollution from cars, 
trucks and other sources than by traffic crashes, researchers estimate in a 
report that says cleaning up would prolong the lives of thousands of people.

The researchers, in a study in the journal Science, said that cutting 
greenhouse gases in just four major cities - Sao Paulo, Brazil; Mexico 
City; Santiago, Chile and New York City - could save 64,000 lives over the 
next 20 years.

Greenhouse gases, principally carbon dioxide or ozone, are those pollutants 
that tend to trap the sun's heat in the atmosphere or to affect solar 
radiation.

The gases have been blamed for causing global warming, but the study's lead 
author, Devra Lee Davis, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University's Heinz 
School in Pittsburgh, said the effects are not just long-term.

``The message in our study is that there are real and immediate health 
benefits'' in reducing greenhouse gases, she said.

She said that burning of fossils fuels, such as gasoline in cars or coal in 
power plants, can create air pollutants such as ozone, airborne particles 
small enough to be inhaled, carbon dioxide and other gases. The pollutants, 
said Davis, can cause people to die prematurely from asthma, breathing 
disorders and heart disease.

``It is our best estimate that more people are being killed by air 
pollution ... than from traffic crashes,'' said Davis. ``There are more 
than a thousand studies from 20 countries all showing that you can predict 
a certain death rate based on the amount of pollution.''

Some experts, however, say that the direct connection between air pollution 
and death is not that clear, even in cities.

Dr. Russell V. Luepker, a cardiologist and professor at the University of 
Minnesota, said that air pollution is not recognized as a significant cause 
of heart disease in the United States.

``It is not a major factor in developing heart disease, but it does play a 
role in acute episodes that can kill you,'' said Luepker, an expert 
designated by the American Heart Association as a spokesman. ``More people 
either come to emergency rooms or die of heart disease during pollution 
episodes,'' but the pollution did not start the disease, he said.

Dr. Marian Frieri, a professor of medicine and an asthma expert at State 
University of New York at Stony Brook, said that air pollution can 
contribute to asthma inflammation but is only one factor on top of another 
condition.

``We have a lot of patients who are affected by pollution,'' she said. 
``Ozone can increase the reaction to allergies, for instance. It is like a 
second whammy effect.''

Davis and four co-authors said that adopting greenhouse-gas abatement 
technologies now available could prevent thousands of cases of chronic 
bronchitis and save millions of days of restricted or lost work.

``We're not talking about Buck Rogers-like, futuristic technologies,'' 
Davis said.

She said although the study concentrated on just four cities that have a 
combined population of 45 million, the conclusions probably could be 
applied to cities worldwide.

The data are consistent with a World Health Organization study that 
estimated that air pollution would cause about 8 million deaths worldwide 
by 2020, she said.

Dr. Jonathan Patz of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 
said the study by Davis and her co-authors draws ``an important conclusion.''

``It shows that there are significant health benefits to be had from 
reducing emissions from the burning of fossil fuels,'' he said.

Carbon dioxide and other gases from the burning of coal and oil have been 
blamed by many researchers for warming of the climate. Some have predicted 
long-term and varied global effects, including such phenomena as melting 
glaciers, rising sea levels and recurring weather extremes.

On the Net:

Global warming: http://www.ipcc.ch

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