Air pollution exposure substantially increases death risk to those with diabetes, heart disease, lung disease, arthritis, study finds

Probably not a surprise to many, but a just-presented study found that regular exposure to air pollution kills people — and especially at risk are those with certain diseases. Those include:

• Diabetes.
• Inflammatory diseases such as arthritis and lupus.
• Heart disease.
• Lung disease.

And just one year’s exposure to moderate air pollution is enough to increase fatalities, found the study presented May 22 at the American Thoracic Society International Conference and reported in Medical News Today.

 

Some similar posts:

    Not Exactly
   

Leave a Reply

Please leave these two fields as-is:

Protected by Invisible Defender. Showed 403 to 7,701 bad guys.

Subscribe without commenting


Search site

Home

Editor

  • million-selling self-help author, success coach, therapist, book coach, ken winston caine helps you come true by facilitating rapid breakthroughs in your life, business, income, health, relationships and energy levels
  • ken winston caine
  • 'Holistic Self-Help Doc'
    exploring the frontiers of holistics & personal development ...
    Sharing 'what works,'
    what doesn't,
    and what's simply freakin' fascinating

  • Author/co-author of health and wholeness books that have helped well more than a million people improve the quality of their lives.

    Endorsed by:

    ✓ Larry Dossey, M.D., author of The Extraordinary Healing Power of Ordinary Things

    ✓ Bernie Siegel, M.D., author of Love, Medicine & Miracles

    ✓ Science Daily

    ✓ MotherNature.com

    ✓ HealthPress.com

    ✓ Suffering.net

    ✓ Breast Cancer Resource Directory

    ✓ Arthritis Insight

    ✓ Renewal at Work

    ✓ A Healthy Advantage

    ✓ MVP Healthcare

    ✓ Fitness Pros

    ✓ iVillage.com Parent Soup

    ✓ First Path

    ✓ And more...

    ken winston caine is a former managing editor for Rodale, the world's premiere holistic lifestyles publisher, promoting organic living and making the world a better place for more than 60 years.

Sections


Search site