Traffic pollution may cause childhood asthma, says study

Traffic pollution may cause childhood asthma, says study
Updated 23 March 2013
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Traffic pollution may cause childhood asthma, says study

Traffic pollution may cause childhood asthma, says study

PARIS: As much as 14 percent of chronic childhood asthma may be caused by people living near busy roads and exposed to traffic pollution, a study in 10 European cities found yesterday. The study, released by the European Respiratory Journal, matched local health data with exposure to traffic pollution in Barcelona, Bilbao, Brussels, Granada, Ljubljana, Rome, Seville, Stockholm, Valencia and Vienna.
They calculated proximity to busy roads, defined as carrying 10,000 vehicles per day. “We estimated that an average of 33,200 asthma cases (14 percent of all asthmatic children) were attributable to near-road traffic-related pollutants,” the researchers wrote.
“In other words these cases would not have occurred if no one lived within the buffer zone or if those pollutants did not exist.” The results were comparable, the authors said, to the burden associated with passive smoking — which the World Health Organization blames for four to 18 percent of asthma cases in children.