What's the economic cost of premature births linked to air pollution?

A child touches her pregnant mother's stomach at the last stages of her pregnancy in Bordeaux April 28, 2010. A January 2010 report indicates that life expectancy and fertility of French women are among the highest in Europe.

Could air pollution cause premature births? Image: REUTERS/Regis Duvignau

David March
Author, Futurity
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Future of Global Health and Healthcare

The annual economic cost of the nearly 16,000 premature births linked to air pollution in the United States has reached $4.33 billion.

The total includes $760 million spent on prolonged hospital stays and longterm use of medications and $3.57 billion in lost economic productivity due to physical and mental disabilities associated with preterm birth.

The new analysis, published online in Environmental Health Perspectives, is the first to examine the costs of premature births due to air pollution in the United States. Air pollution is known to increase toxic chemicals in the blood and cause immune system stress, which can weaken the placenta surrounding the fetus and lead to preterm birth.

“Air pollution comes with a tremendous cost, not only in terms of human life, but also in terms of the associated economic burden to society,” says lead study investigator Leonardo Trasande, professor at the New York University Langone Medical Center. “It is also important to note that this burden is preventable, and can be reduced by limiting emissions from automobiles and coal-fired power plants.”

For the study, researchers examined data from the Environmental Protection Agency, the USynters for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Institute of Medicine. They calculated average air pollution exposure and the number of premature births per county and then tabulated estimates of the long-term health implications of premature birth as detailed in more than six previous investigations and computer models that focused on early death, decreased IQ, work absences due to frequent hospitalizations, and overall poor health.

The researchers plan to share their findings with policymakers in an effort to help shape regulations and laws designed to reduce air pollution and protect public health.

The national percentage of premature births in the US has declined from a peak of 12.8 percent in 2006 to 11.4 percent in 2013, but the number remains well above those of other developed countries.

Moreover, the decline is insufficient to meet the goal of 8.1 percent by 2020 set by the March of Dimes, a voluntary health organization dedicated to reducing premature births and infant mortality.

Statistical estimates developed by the researchers as part of their analysis attribute slightly more than 3 percent of premature births to air pollution.

The number of premature births linked to air pollution was highest in urban counties, primarily in Southern California and the Eastern US, with peak numbers in the Ohio River Valley.

The researchers plan to conduct further research into the role of specific outdoor air pollutants, especially particulate matter, and whether any stages of pregnancy are more susceptible to their negative effects, including increased risk of heart and lung diseases. They also plan to expand the analysis to a global level.

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