air pollution, ozone pollution, air quality, air pollution facts in the State of the Air 2007 report air pollution, ozone pollution, air quality, air pollution facts in the State of the Air 2007 report
air pollution, ozone pollution, air quality, air pollution facts in the State of the Air 2007 report

Table of Contents

Executive Summary

The State of the Air in 2003-2005

Tables
Populations at Risk in the U.S.
◊ Most Polluted Cities in the U.S.
Most Polluted Counties in the U.S.
Most Polluted Counties in Each State
Cleanest Cities
Cleanest Counties

Health Effects of Ozone and Particle Pollution
Ozone Pollution
Particle Pollution

Focusing on Children's Health

Protecting the Nation From Air Pollution
EPA Should Strengthen the Ozone Standard
Ways to Clean Up Our Air

What You Can Do to Protect Your Family

State Tables

Appendix: Description of Methodology

Health Effects of Ozone and Particle Pollution
cont'd

Particle pollution
Remember that dirty truck exhaust?

The dirty, smoky part of that stream of exhaust is made of particle pollution.More new evidence shows that particle pollution—such as that coming from that exhaust smoke—can shorten lives, contribute to heart disease, lung cancer and asthma attacks and interfere with the growth and work of the lungs.

What is Particle Pollution?
Particle pollution refers to a mix of very tiny solid and liquid particles that are in the air we breathe. But nothing about particle pollution is simple. First of all, the particles themselves are different sizes. Some are one-tenth the diameter of a strand of hair. Many are even tinier; some are so small they can be seen only with an electron microscope. Because of their small size, you can’t see the individual particles. You can see only the haze that forms when millions of particles blur the spread of sunlight. You may not be able to tell when you’re breathing particle pollution, yet it is so dangerous it can shorten your life.

Because particle pollution ranges in size from the tiny to the microscopic, the differences in the sizes makes a big difference in how they affect us. Our natural defenses help us to cough or sneeze larger particles out of our bodies. But those defenses don’t keep out smaller particles, those that are smaller than 10 microns (or micrometers) in diameter, or about one-seventh the diameter of a single human hair. These particles get trapped in the lungs, while the smallest are so minute that they can pass through the lungs into the bloodstream, just like the essential oxygen molecules we need to survive.

 

Researchers categorize particles according to size, grouping them as coarse, fine and ultrafine. Coarse particles fall between 2.5 microns and 10 microns in diameter and are called PM10-2.5. Fine particles are 2.5 microns in diameter or smaller and are called PM2.5. Ultrafine particles are smaller than 0.1 micron in diameter10 and are small enough to pass through the lung tissue into the bloodstream, circulating like the oxygen molecules themselves. No matter what the size, particles can be harmful to your health.

 

Because particles are formed in so many different ways, they also can be composed of many complex compounds. Although we often think of particles as solids, not all are. Some are completely liquid; some are solids suspended in liquids. As the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency puts it, particles are really “a mixture of mixtures.”11 The mixtures differ between the eastern and western United States. For example, the eastern states have more sulfate particles than the western, largely due to the high levels of sulfur dioxide emitted by large, coalfired power plants. In contrast, in southern California, nitrate particles from motor vehicle exhaust form a larger proportion of the unhealthful mix.12

 

Where Does Particle Pollution Come From? 

Particle pollution is so complex in part because its components come from many sources. It is generally produced through two separate processes: mechanical and chemical.

 

The simpler process is mechanical, which means the breaking down of bigger bits into smaller bits with the material remaining essentially the same, only becoming smaller. Mechanical processes primarily form coarse particles.13 Dust storms, construction and demolition, mining operations, agriculture, and coal and oil combustion are among the activities that produce coarse particles.

 

In contrast, chemical processes in the atmosphere create most of the tiniest fine and ultrafine particles. Combustion sources burn fuels and emit gases. These gases can simply vaporize and then condense to become a particle of the same chemical compound. Or they can react with other gases or particles in the atmosphere to form a particle of a different chemical compound. Particles formed by this latter process come from the reaction of elemental carbon (soot), heavy metals, sulfur dioxide (SO2), nitrogen oxides (NOX) and volatile organic compounds with water and other compounds in the atmosphere.14 Burning fossil fuels in factories, power plants, steel mills, smelters, diesel- and gasoline-powered motor vehicles (cars and trucks) and equipment generates a large part of the raw materials for fine particles. So does burning wood in residential fireplaces and wood stoves and burning agricultural fields or forests.

 

What Can Particles Do to Your Health?

That irritating dark smoke coming out of the truck’s tailpipe is probably directly emitting carbon particles and the raw ingredients for other fine particles into the air. That dark stream mixes with exhaust from other cars, trucks and heavy equipment as well as the exhaust plumes from power plants, factories and many other sources to create the particle pollution problem we have in many places in the United States today.

 

Particle pollution can damage the body in ways similar to cigarette smoking, researchers have discovered. In a 2005 review of the research on how particles cause harm, researchers found that the body responds to particles in ways similar as its response to cigarette smoke. This finding helps explain why particle pollution can cause heart attacks and strokes.15

 

Study upon Study upon Study...

Studies showing the dangers of particle pollution are pouring in by the thousands. More than 2,000 peer-reviewed studies on the subject have been published since 1996, when the EPA last reviewed the standards for particle pollution. The new studies validate the research done before 1996, showing the strong relationship between particle pollution, illness, hospitalization and premature death.16

 

Researchers these days are exploring possible differences in health effects of the three sizes of particles and particles from different sources, such as diesel particles from trucks and buses or sulfates from coal-fired power plants. So far, the evidence remains clear that all particles from all sources are dangerous.17

 

Short-Term Exposure Can Be Deadly

First and foremost, short-term exposure to particle pollution can kill. Deaths can occur on the very day that particle levels are high or within one to two months afterward. Unfortunately, particle pollution does not just make people die a few days earlier than they might otherwise; these are deaths that would not have occurred if the air were cleaner.18 Particle pollution also diminishes lung function, causes greater use of asthma medications and increased rates of school absenteeism, emergency room visits and hospital admissions. Other adverse effects can be coughing, wheezing, cardiac arrhythmias and heart attacks. According to the findings from some of the latest studies, short-term increases in particle pollution have been linked to:

  • death from respiratory and cardiovascular causes, including strokes;19,20,21,22
  • increased mortality in infants and young children;23
  • increased numbers of heart attacks, especially among the elderly and in people with heart conditions;24
  • inflammation of lung tissue in young, healthy adults;25
  • increased hospitalization for cardiovascular disease, including strokes and congestive heart failure;26,27,28
  • increased emergency room visits for patients suffering from acute respiratory ailments;29
  • increased hospitalization for asthma among children; and30,31,32
  • increased severity of asthma attacks in children.33

Year-Round Exposure

Breathing high levels of particle pollution day in and day out also can be deadly, as landmark studies in the 1990s showed conclusively.34 Chronic exposure to particle pollution can shorten life by one to three years.35 Other impacts range from premature births to serious respiratory disorders, even when the particle levels are very low. irritating dark smoke coming out of the truck’s tailpipe is probably directly emitting carbon particles and the raw ingredients for other fine particles into the air.

 

Year-round exposure to particle pollution has also been linked to:

  • increased hospitalization for asthma attacks for children living near roads with heavy truck or trailer traffic;36,37
  • slowed lung function growth in children and teenagers;38,39
  • significant damage to the small airways of the lungs;40
  • increased risk of dying from lung cancer; and41
  • increased risk of death from cardiovascular disease.42

Alarmingly, the risks may be even greater than previously thought. Earlier studies of the long-term health risks of air pollution relied on estimates of the average exposure to people in the community. New evidence from studies published since 2005 suggests that those estimates may be far too low. Tracking 23,000 residents of Los Angeles and looking at data from monitors nearest to these, researchers found that the risk of premature death from fine particle pollution may be three times higher than previously reported.43 New research into the health risks of 65,000 women over age 50 found that those who lived in areas with higher levels of particle pollution faced a much greater risk of dying from heart disease than had been previously estimated. Even women who lived within the same city faced differing levels of risk depending on the annual levels of pollution in their neighborhoods.44

 

Who Is at Risk?

Anyone living in an area with a high level of particle pollution is at risk (you can take a look at levels in your state in this report). People at the greatest risk from particle pollution exposure include those with lung disease such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which includes chronic bronchitis and emphysema; people with sensitive airways, where exposure to particle pollution can cause wheezing, coughing and respiratory irritation; the elderly; people with heart disease; and children. New research points to ever-larger groups at higher risk, including diabetics and, most recently, women over 50.45

 

Health Effects continued...



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air pollution, ozone pollution, air quality, air pollution facts in the State of the Air 2007 report