Previous studies have tied road traffic air pollution to low birth
weight. Road traffic produces noise as well as pollution, but
studies of noise pollution have had conflicting results, say the
authors.
“We know that noise is associated with adverse health effects, e.g.
sleep disruption, increased blood pressure, and cardiovascular
disease, so it could plausibly have an impact on mothers’ health in
pregnancy and the health of unborn babies,” study leader Dr. Rachel
Smith Smith at the School of Public Health of the Imperial College
in London told Reuters Health in an email.
Smith’s team wanted to investigate the effect of exposures to both
traffic-related air and noise pollution during pregnancy on babies’
birth weight.
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“We found increased risk of babies being born with low birth weight
or small for gestational age, at term, to mothers with higher
exposure to air pollution from road traffic during pregnancy. We did
not see an independent effect of road traffic noise on birth
weight,” she said.
As reported in The BMJ, Smith and colleagues used national birth
registers to identify over 540,000 live, single, full-term births
occurring in the Greater London area between 2006 and 2010.
Specifically, the study team was interested in low birth weight
(less than 5.5 pounds) and being born small for gestational age.
Mothers’ home addresses at the time of birth were used to estimate
the average monthly exposure to traffic-related pollutants including
nitrogen dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and fine particulate matter, or
PM2.5. The researchers also estimated average day and night-time
road traffic noise levels.
Increases in traffic-related air pollutants, especially PM2.5, were
associated with 2 to 6 percent increased odds of having a low birth
weight baby and about 1 to 3 percent increased odds of a baby being
small for gestational age, even after taking road traffic noise into
account.
The risk associated with air pollution should be considered in
context, i.e. the size of the effect of air pollution on an
individual baby’s birth weight is relatively small compared to the
well-recognized effect of smoking, said Smith.
“However, at the population level the impact could be large, because
collectively more women are exposed to air pollution than are
exposed to smoking during pregnancy,” she said.
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There is a limit to what individuals can do to reduce their exposure
to air pollution because making major changes to lifestyle, travel
or where they live is just not feasible for the vast majority of
people. Improving air quality and reducing air pollution in our
towns and cities, and thus reducing health impacts of air pollution,
requires action by policymakers, said Smith.
The study “should increase awareness that prenatal exposure to small
particle air pollution is detrimental to the unborn child,” Sarah
Stock and her colleague wrote in an editorial in The BMJ.
Stock, a researcher at the University of Edinburgh Queen's Medical
Research Institute in Edinburgh, UK, said air pollution from traffic
is well known to be detrimental to child and adult health.
“This study provides further evidence that air pollution from
traffic is also harmful to unborn babies. However, it shows that
traffic noise is unlikely to be related to low birth weight in
babies,” Stock, who was not involved in the study said.
Pollution should be high on agendas at a local and national level,
with pollution control integrated into development planning, said
Stock.
“Key initiatives include enforcing emission control technologies in
motor vehicles; ensuring easy access to affordable and efficient
public transport; encouraging walking and cycling; and mandating
clean air zones,” she said.
Unfortunately, women have few options to reduce their risk on a
personal level, said Stock.
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“Avoiding air pollution is difficult, and we have no evidence that
lifestyle measures, or wearing protective masks actually reduces
chronic exposure to harmful pollutants. We do know avoiding exposure
to tobacco smoke is really important. More research in this area is
needed to find out the best ways for women to reduce their risk,”
she said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2Ap2Nts and http://bit.ly/2krVISt The BMJ,
online December 5, 2017.
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