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By Rebecca V. Snowden
A new report from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) shows that
some regions of the United States face greater health risks from air
pollution than others.
The report, based on emissions data from 2002, estimates the
local and regional concentrations of 181 different air pollutants, such
as benzene, methylene chloride, and acrolein. EPA scientists looked at
exposure from vehicles such as buses, trains, and automobiles;
industrial contaminants; as well as other sources.
Eighty of those pollutants are thought to affect cancer risk.
The report also looks at pollution's effect on respiratory and
neurological health.
The agency found that approximately 1 out of every 27,000
Americans would develop cancer because of breathing polluted air -- if
those individuals were exposed to 2002 emissions levels 24 hours a day
for 70 years.
"In other words, for every million people, air pollutants add
an additional 36 people who will develop cancer over a lifetime,
according to the EPA models," says Michael J. Thun, MD, MS, American
Cancer Society vice president emeritus of Epidemiology and Surveillance
Research. "An additional 36 is a meaningful number in terms of policy
and regulation, but it comprises a very small fraction [less than one
out of 10,000 cancers] of background risk."
The lifetime risk of developing cancer from air pollution is
down from 41.5 cases per million people from the last analysis, which
came out in 2006 and was based on 1999 emission levels.
The report also found that people living in nearly 600
neighborhoods across the country are breathing higher concentrations of
toxic air than in other parts of the country. For example, the increase
in risk of developing cancer from air pollution is higher in areas of
Los Angeles, California, known for its smog, than in less densely
populated areas such as the Dakotas, Wyoming, and Montana. View a summary of the results and a map of the United States showing areas of high risk.
Emissions from vehicles accounted for about 30% of the overall
average cancer risk from air pollution; most of this is due to benzene.
Local industry emissions account for about 25 percent.
These data will be used to help states shape air-quality
control plans required by the Clean Air Act. The Clean Air Act gives
states the responsibility for regulating air pollution. Since the 1990
Clean Air Act Amendments, toxic air emissions have decreased by 40%
from all sources, according to the EPA.
Studies using data from the American Cancer Society's Cancer Prevention Studies,
specifically CPS-II, have contributed to the body of evidence that has established the link between cancer risk and
air pollution in the form of particulates and ozone. These studies
address a wide range of potential exposures that may be associated with
cancer.
For more information about air pollution and cancer risk, see
our sections on Air Pollution and Chemicals. For more information about
the CPS studies, click here.
Reviewed by:
Members of the ACS
Medical Content Staff
ACS News Center stories are provided as a source of cancer-related
news and are not intended to be used as
press releases.
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