Showing posts with label social class. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social class. Show all posts

Monday, June 1, 2015

New studies link pollution to a variety of health risks

Obviously, who suffers the most with air pollution & its related illnesses: the poor. And thanks to the government's cutting of the healthcare budgets, those poor can't even get proper healthcare. It's like a double whammy.
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Since the US Clean Air Act’s passage in the 1970s, there have been a steady stream of reports correlating exposure to air pollutants with a variety of health impacts. But in the early days, much of that information was too rudimentary to be of much use. Monitoring technology has improved in the decades since, & state air-quality boards have amassed volumes of actionable data about air pollution.
 
The increase in available data coupled with advances in chemistry & 3D modeling over the past few years has enabled scientists to identify new particle systems within air pollution. Researchers are now able to determine all the various chemicals & particles that air pollution includes, & to study precisely how these various elements interact with, & in some cases fundamentally change, the human body.
 
Those advances have led to a rapid increase in published studies about air pollution over the past year, as researchers have focused their work on the interaction between pollution particles & human health. Multiple long-term studies of human health are beginning to produce results, as are ongoing studies of air pollution. 3 studies published just last week illustrate the state of rapidly advancing science around air pollution today.
 
In one study, Louisiana State University researcher Stephania Cormier reported that a particular type of free radicals (called environmentally persistent free radicals, or EPFRs), formed within the particulate matter emitted by cooking stoves, cars, factories, waste incinerators, wood fires, & cigarettes, can damage human cells.
 
The findings could have broad implications for businesses, considering that the Supreme Court is currently wrestling with how to interpret the Clean Air Act.
 
Cormier & her team divided a population of mice into 2 groups, exposing one to EPFRs & the other to no pollution. They then infected both groups with a flu virus.
 
The pollution-exposed mice were rendered virtually defenseless to the virus: 20% more of them died from the flu. Instead of fighting off the disease, their bodies reacted by triggering an anti-inflammatory signal, Interleukin-10, & switching on both an immune-regulating protein called aryl hydrocarbon receptor & immune cells called regulatory T cells, both of which turn off the body’s defenses against infection.
 
The researchers also found that the EPFRs caused oxidative stress, an imbalance between the production of free radicals & the ability of the body to counteract or detoxify their harmful effects.
 
What that means for similarly exposed communities is that asthma & the flu will be more severe for vulnerable members, like infants & the elderly.
 
More & worse allergies
 
Another study, published on 22 March by researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry in Germany, found that common traffic-related air pollutants may make allergies more severe.
 
The study’s authors conducted lab tests & computer simulations to study the effect of ozone & nitrogen dioxide on a primary birch pollen, Bet v1, & found that both pollutants affected how proteins in the pollen bound together, potentially creating a more potent allergen.

“Our research is showing that chemical modifications of allergenic proteins may play an important role in the increasing prevalence of allergies worldwide,” Christopher Kampf, one of the study’s authors, said in a statement.
 
Impact on the brain
 
Yet another study released last week, this one a collaborative effort between researchers at the Institute for the Developing Mind at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles & at Columbia University’s Center for Children’s Environmental Health, found a connection between common pollutants found in a wide range of emissions & cognitive & behavioral impairment.
 
The study looked at the effects of airborne polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH), a molecule prevalent in emissions from motor vehicles, oil & coal burning, wildfires & agricultural burning, hazardous waste sites, & tobacco smoke as well as charred foods.
 
The research team selected 40 minority youth, born to Latina or African American women, that Columbia researchers have been following from birth, & used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to measure their brains.
 
The Columbia researchers had previously reported that PAH exposure during gestation in this group was associated with multiple neurodevelopmental disturbances, including development delay by age 3, reduced verbal IQ at age 5, & symptoms of anxiety & depression at age 7.
 
In the group of 40 studied in the MRI test, the researchers found a loss of the brain’s white matter surface, which correlates to slower processing of information & severe behavioral problems, including ADHD & aggression.
 
Postnatal PAH exposure – measured at age 5 – was found to contribute to additional disturbances in development of white matter in a separate area of the brain, one associated with concentration, reasoning, judgment, & problem-solving ability.

“This sample of 40 was quite ‘pure,’ in that their exposure to other known neurotoxicants was minimal, so we have more confidence in being able to attribute the brain abnormalities to the effects of prenatal & early childhood exposure to PAH,” Peterson said.
 
While the study group was small, Peterson said these results emphasize what we already know about the harmful effects of tobacco & add to the growing base of knowledge about the impacts of other sources of air pollution. Given the mounting evidence, he said, clinicians should educate prospective parents about these risks, especially in early pregnancy.
 
Peterson said that in less urban areas, exposure to pollutants from wildfires, agricultural burning & hazardous waste sites might be more relevant, & that women & children should remain indoors & use air conditioners as much as possible to avoid the airborne products of these fires.

“As the link between air-borne pollutants & adverse brain changes is linear & seems not to have any threshold that defines safe & unsafe exposure, any reduction in exposure during the most active periods of brain development – in fetal life & in early childhood – will be helpful.”

Translating research into action
 
According to the most recent American Lung Association State of the Air report, more than half of Americans live in areas with dangerously high levels of air pollution.
 
Children are the most severely impacted by air pollution, both in utero & in early childhood.
 
Air pollution also remains an issue of class & race. The dominant sources of pollution – traffic, industrial emissions, energy-related emissions (from oil refineries & coal plants), & hazardous waste – all disproportionately affect low-income & minority communities.
 
The quickest way to improve the air quality of all communities is increased state & federal regulation of the sources of air pollution. To that end, the US Supreme Court is due to address 2 major Environmental Protection Agency rules this summer, one that aims to regulate cross-state air pollution & one that would require better pollution controls on coal power plants.
 
Both have been criticized for being expensive & onerous to implement, but Supreme Court justices in favor of the rules have pointed to the EPA’s obligation to protect public health, not private profits.
 
Judge Judith W Rogers wrote as much in the majority opinion on the EPA’s mercury rule, which would require coal power plants to install scrubbers that would limit mercury emissions, costing them $9.6bn a year. Rogers said the EPA’s focus on “factors relating to public health hazards, & not industry’s objections that emission controls are costly” should motivate Congress to make appropriate & necessary regulatory rules.
 
Moreover, because the scrubbers required would also reduce other air pollutants, the EPA has estimated that the rule would save $26bn to $89bn per year in healthcare costs. The latest batch of air pollution research helps support that claim.

Thursday, February 12, 2015

UNC Shooting & Western Media Bigotry

Frankly, I'm surprised by the reaction that American & Western media didn't give this story enough airtime. What were you expecting? That American & Western media is biased & fair. Heck, most of the public in Western countries isn't even unbiased & fair. By nature, humans are not supposed to be unbiased. We are not robots, after all. Media gives what the public wants. Public doesn't care if 3 Muslims were killed. Looking at the Facebook comments to this Al-Jazeera story, it seems quite a few are saddened by the fact that more weren't killed (& btw, they are not trolls since these comments are not anonymous).

If you are still thinking that the West is fair & unbiased, then sir / madam, you are living a fool's dream.
 
All of the West is suffering from dire economic situation. When economy suffers & people lose jobs in droves, they like to take their anger / frustration out on someone. They turn to anyone who is different from them; religion, language, race etc.
 
Although, I may sound like a broken record, I'll say it again that time is coming that if a person appears to be a Muslim from his/her name or appearance (hijab etc), then he/she will be in fear of his/her life, all the time. After all, movie "American Sniper" blatantly stoked the hatred for Muslims & Arabs, in particular, & it is going to win several Oscars for it. It has already earned $350M USD in box office. Evidently, millions & millions of Americans loved the movie. Now, all that rage needs a release valve & authorities will try to spin these kinds of stories as "not a hate crime".
 
This atheist guy did what others are only thinking. If you remove the shackles of American / Western judicial system, then you will truly see the depravity of the public. Authorities are spinning this story as "not a hate crime" to reduce the sentence this guy can get. Regardless, be thankful that he is still in custody & will get punished, whatever that punishment might be, & forget about the biased Western media. Shouting about the biases won't make the media (& Western public) any less biased, esp. since they are falling on deaf ears.
 
We can ostracise this double-standard as much as we like & even feel like that we are achieving something in this fight, but we Muslims don't own the media. Our efforts will change the minds of 100 people around us. The media will turn the public against us in 1000s in one instant.
 
We, Muslims, are 2nd-class citizens in these Western, Judeo-Christian countries. Regardless of our birthplace (in the West or in the East), if our appearance or habits or culture (not drinking alcoholic beverages, dating etc) are different from the majority around us, then we are 2nd-class citizens. In every walk of life, we are treated as such. It doesn't matter how much education or work experience or whatever else you can achieve in these countries, that second-class status ain't going away, until or unless, we change our religion. Are you ready to take that step? If not, then accept what's given to you. Slavery may have ended but it never ended, actually. It has just taken a different form.

Even slavery ended because African-Americans got united under one banner. We, Muslims, are all over the place. Many Muslim sisters shun the hijab like the plague, & instead, prefer mini-skirts, clubbing, drinking, & dating. So, why would non-Muslims in the West respect a hijabi sister over that partying sister? We ourselves are not united for any cause & we are ostracizing another country's media while residing in that country.