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New study shows air pollution linked to lower birth weight
Submitted by Kerry Shearer
Sacramento Metropolitan Air Quality Management District (Jan 4, 2005)
 
NEW YORK, NY — U.S. Government researchers report that pregnant women who live in areas with high levels of air pollution may give birth to slightly smaller babies.

A new study of more than 18,000 full-term infants born in California in 2000 found that a mother's exposure to fine-particle air pollution seemed to make a difference in her baby's birth weight and the infant's risk of being below average in size.

PM2.5 is composed of microscopic substances such as acids, metals and organic chemicals, and can be seen in the form of a hazy sky.

It is given off by the burning of fuels from sources such as cars, power plants and some industrial processes.

The study shows that babies born to women who lived in areas with the highest levels of PM2.5 were 26 percent more likely to be small for their gestational age compared with infants born to women from low-pollution areas.

The absolute difference between these groups of infants was modest.

Among women with the least exposure to fine-particle pollution, 8.5 percent had a baby who was small for gestational age.

That compares with 9.2 percent of women with the highest pollution exposure.

Similarly, the difference between the groups as far as average birth weight was slight, noted the study's lead author, Dr. Jennifer D. Parker of the National Center for Health Statistics in Hyattsville, Maryland.

"But the results are consistent with other research," she said in an interview with Reuters Health. Therefore, the "body of evidence" points to an effect of air pollution on birth weight, according to Parker.

She and her colleagues report their study findings in the January issue of the journal Pediatrics.

According to Parker and her colleagues, PM2.5 levels may influence birth weight either indirectly through effects on the mother's health or by directly affecting fetal development.

The exact reason for the link between fine-particle pollution and birth weight is not yet clear, however, Parker said.

For their study, she and her colleagues analyzed data from air pollution monitoring stations in California and looked at birth records for 18,247 full-term infants whose mothers lived within five miles of a monitoring station during pregnancy. (Source: Reuters)