| Literature DB >> 36038659 |
Melanie Leong1, Catherine J Karr2, Shetal I Shah3, Heather L Brumberg3.
Abstract
Common outdoor air pollutants present threats to fetal and neonatal health, placing neonatal-perinatal clinical specialists in an important role for harm reduction through patient counseling and advocacy. Climate change is intertwined with air pollution and influences air quality. There is increasing evidence demonstrating the unique vulnerability in the development of adverse health consequences from exposures during the preconception, prenatal, and early postnatal periods, as well as promising indications that policies aimed at addressing these toxicants have improved birth outcomes. Advocacy by neonatal-perinatal providers articulating the potential impact of pollutants on newborns and mothers is essential to promoting improvements in air quality and reducing exposures. The goal of this review is to update neonatal-perinatal clinical specialists on the key ambient air pollutants of concern, their sources and health effects, and to outline strategies for protecting patients and communities from documented adverse health consequences.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36038659 PMCID: PMC9421104 DOI: 10.1038/s41372-022-01479-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Perinatol ISSN: 0743-8346 Impact factor: 3.225
Major outdoor air pollutants, health effects, and mitigation measures for neonatal-perinatal providers.
| Pollutant | Description and Common Sources of Exposure | Mechanism of Action | Neonatal/Perinatal Effectsa [ | % of children in US exposed to levels above EPA NAAQS as of 2019b [ | General Mitigation/Prevention Strategies for Outdoor Air Pollution |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ozone (O3) | • Major component of urban smog • Greenhouse gas • In the presence of heat and sunlight, NO species and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) undergo a photochemical reaction to form ozone • VOCs derive from emissions from industrial facilities and motor vehicles, gasoline vapors, and chemical solvents | • Reacts with, and damages, cell membranes in respiratory tract (nose to alveoli) and mucus membranes | • Low birth weight • Risk of asthma • Decreased lung function | 46.2% | Individual Action • Masking (primarily for PM) • Use of HEPA filters (primarily for PM) • Spending time indoors when AQI is unhealthy or unhealthy for sensitive groups Community Action • Plant trees and expand access to parks/green spaces • Promote community-wide shifts to non-fossil fuel based transportation and accessible mass transit • Maintain emissions standards as well as requirements for routine inspections and vehicle maintenance • Limit proximity of schools, child care facilities, and residences to traffic corridors • Anti-idling policies at schools • Electric school buses Clinical Practice • Address underlying conditions and co-morbidities • Mental health counseling related to climate change • Identify local resources • Display Climate Action posters in medical offices • Action plans for excessive heat • Educate patients about their neighborhood’s Air Quality Index (AQI) and toxicant exposures ( • NY State Prescriptions for Prevention ( • Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Units ( • Moms Clean Air Force ( • The Medical Society Consortium on Climate and Health ( • Climate for Health ( Advocacy • Encourage hospitals to promote sustainability and energy efficiency: Ex. National Academy of Medicine’s Action Collaborative on Decarbonizing the US Health Sector, joined by AAP in 2022 as a Network Organization ( • Encourage legislators to enact policy, such as stricter federal car emissions standards or expanding the Clean Air Act to include wildfire smoke • Emphasize the importance of considering the perinatal and neonatal life stages when implementing programs and policies related to ambient air contaminants |
| Particulate matter (PM) | • Airborne mixture of solid particles and liquid droplets • Deposition pattern determined by particle size, with diameter >10 µm unable to pass nasal passages PM10: Diameter <10 µm • Thoracic region PM2.5 (fine): Diameter <2.5 µm • Small conducting airways and alveoli • • • Fuel combustion from motor vehicles, power plants, and industrial operations • Combustion of organic material in fireplaces and wood stoves; wildfires • Dust from mechanical breakdown of solid matter (ex. rocks, soil) | • Oxidative stress/ production of reactive oxygen species • Pro-inflammatory • Alters DNA methylation processes | • Preterm birth • Low birth weight • Increased risk of autism spectrum disorder • Risk of asthma | PM2.5 (24 hour): 20% PM2.5 (annual): 4.4% PM10 (24 hour): 10.2% | |
| Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) | • Nitrogen and oxygen combine in atmosphere during high temperature combustion • Often used as proxy for traffic emissions • High temperature fuel combustion, vehicles and coal • Road traffic, electricity generation, power plants • Enclosed spaces such as homes with poorly-vented gas appliances (ex. stoves, heaters, boilers) | • Interacts with other chemicals to form secondary pollutants such as ozone and particulate matter | • Impaired host defenses • Increased airway responsiveness and inflammation • Preterm birth • Low birth weight • Risk of asthma | 0.7% | |
| Sulfur dioxide (SO2) | • Formed in atmosphere from oxidative reaction of sulfuric acid with ammonia in presence of moisture • Burning of coal, diesel, and sulfur-containing oil • Power plants, smelters, ships, pulp and paper mills that burn coal | • Respiratory irritant | • Preterm birth • Low birth weight | 2.3% |
Summary of major outdoor air pollutants, including common sources of exposure, mechanism of action, neonatal/perinatal health effects, percent of children in US exposed to levels above National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS), and clinician-specific mitigation/prevention strategies. In 2019, the percentage of children ages 0-17 years living in counties in which the level of air quality standards was exceeded by any standard was overall 50.5%, which has decreased from 76% in 1999. In addition to the criteria pollutants listed in the table, carbon monoxide (CO) and lead have had significant improvements over time, with levels at 0% and 0.3%, respectively, hallmarking the success of the Clean Air Act. Ultrafine PM is italicized as a pollutant as it is not specifically regulated by NAAQS. Of note, wildfire smoke contributes to air pollution but is not directly addressed in the Clean Air Act [78, 79].
aThere are many health effects that are beyond the scope of this paper, as those predominantly relate to adult health. Though this paper focuses on perinatal/neonatal health effects, this additional information can be found using the EPA’s Integrated Science Assessment (www.epa.gov/isa).
bNAAQS are established by the EPA under the Clean Air Act to regulate atmospheric concentrations of six criteria pollutants in outdoor air. Available at www.epa.gov/criteria-air-pollutants/naaqs-table.
Fig. 1Health impacts of air pollution across life stages.
Air pollution, which is interlinked with climate change, has health impacts that are important to neonatal-perinatal clinical specialists. The best-supported adverse health effects are listed here for individual life stages, while the gray bars indicate mechanisms of action, some of which are multi-temporal and span across multiple timeframes. The severity of health effects can be influenced by other social determinants of health, such as socioeconomic factors and race/ethnicity-related disparities.