Friday, April 5, 2013

Pollution and Birth Defects in China

Some recent studies confirm persistent rumors that China's awful pollution is causing a frightening increase in birth defects:
In the U.S., for every 10,000 live births, there are 7.5 infants with neural tube defects. In Shanxi province, that number is 18 times higher: 140 infants. “We wanted to understand what’s really behind the problem,” says Tong, who previously worked at Peking University in Beijing. “We wanted to find out what chemicals caused this.”

Over a 10-year period, the researchers gathered placentas from 80 stillborn or newborn infants in Shanxi with the disorder. Based on their analysis, they confirmed that those infants had been exposed in utero to significant levels of pesticides, industrial solvents, and especially polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), which are released into the air when fossil fuels are burned.
Other kinds of birth defects also seem to be very common, and it seems that many children in the worst polluted regions are developmentally delayed.

No comments: