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Vehicle
Pollution Linked to Respiratory Illness in Children
For Immediate
Release
SACRAMENTO --Recent
findings from a study by USC Keck School of Medicine indicate that
the closer children live to freeways, the higher their risk of asthma.
The findings are consistent with the Help California Breathe Easier
public awareness campaign, which emphasizes the link between vehicle-produced
air pollution and negative health effects, especially respiratory
illness in children.
Help California
Breathe Easier was launched earlier this year by Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger to advance public understanding about the negative
health effects of vehicle-produced air pollution and to increase
participation in the Bureau of Automotive Repair's Consumer Assistance
Program (CAP), which pays motorists to voluntarily retire their
high polluting vehicles or offers assistance toward smog-related
repairs.
"Governor
Schwarzenegger's Administration places children's health as a top
priority," said State Public Health Officer Dr. Mark Horton.
"Air pollution can aggravate diseases like asthma, one of the
leading causes of school absenteeism. If our children aren't healthy,
their success in school and in life is compromised."
In the study,
Southern California researchers looked at the link between pollution
and asthma in 208 children. They found that children who resided
in homes closer to freeways and with higher levels of nitrogen dioxide
(NO2) -- a product of pollutants emitted from vehicle engines --
were more likely to have developed asthma. The risk increased about
89% for approximately every 3/4 mile closer to the freeway the children
lived. The findings were published in the November, 2005 issue of
the journal Epidemiology. "These results suggest that reductions
in tailpipe emissions will translate into improved respiratory health
of California children," said Dr. James Gauderman, lead author
and associate professor of preventive medicine at the USC Keck School
of Medicine. "Considering the enormous personal and economic
costs associated with asthma, it is important to continue developing
public-policy programs that aim to reduce traffic-related pollution."
"This is
even more evidence of the clear link between vehicle pollution and
respiratory illness," said Charlene Zettel, Consumer Affairs
Director. "We must do everything we can to take high-polluting
vehicles off the road."
The Consumer
Assistance Program seeks to reduce air pollution by permanently
removing the worst polluting vehicles from California roadways.
These vehicles make up only ten percent of the vehicles on the road,
but they produce over fifty percent of all vehicle pollution.
The CAP's goal
is to permanently remove 15,000 high-polluting vehicles from California
roadways by June 2006. This represents more than 900 tons of smog-forming
pollutants taken out of California's air, which benefits all Californians,
especially children. According to the California Air Resources Board,
children may be more strongly affected by air pollution because
their lungs are still developing and they tend to spend more time
outdoors, which increases their exposure.
For more information
or to obtain an application for the CAP, call 800-952-5210.
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