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Happy Earth Day! For nearly four decades, we鈥檝e annually devoted a day to taking stock of our planet and rededicating ourselves to its protection. Of course, halting further damage to the earth requires more than a 24-hour commitment once a year.
It necessitates pushing scientific boundaries and generating results that urge environmentally friendly policies. , in partnership with , started working toward that goal in 1998, with a study measuring how air pollution and climate change contribute to health ailments in children.
New results from that research, which followed 728 Dominican and African-American mother-child pairs from pregnancy until the children were preteens, suggest that prenatal exposure to pollutants from vehicles, coal (for power generation) and pesticides can cause preterm births, low birth weight, long-term mental deficiencies, asthma, even a greater risk of cancer.
This is strong fodder for clean-air policy; the data have already helped shape decisions about chlorpyrifos, an insecticide banned for residential鈥攂ut not agricultural鈥攗se and linked to developmental delays in children who were exposed to it while in the womb.
But the research also proves that a unique methodology can work: In addition to taking questionnaires and biological samples from participants鈥攁ll of whom lived in Washington Heights, Harlem or the South Bronx鈥擟CCEH researchers strapped onto these pregnant women backpacks that measured the air鈥檚 chemical make up for 48 hours.
It would seem challenging to recruit women in their third trimesters. But , says partnership with an advocacy group like the Harlem-based WE ACT helped. 鈥淭hey trusted the study,鈥 Perera says of the participants. 鈥淭hey understood that we were concerned about what was out there in the environment and the community that might be harming children.鈥
Perera says the women receive financial compensation for their time, the rate of which depends on the child鈥檚 age and intensity of the commitment (every few months initially, then annually or every other year after the child鈥檚 first birthday). But she sidesteps additional questions about reimbursement, focusing more on the blood, breathing, and developmental delay test results CCCEH gives the families.
鈥淲e provide information about what they can do in their home environment to protect children,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd alternatives to using toxic materials.鈥 The study鈥檚 78% retention rate is high, she adds鈥攑erhaps a testament to the participants鈥 commitment to this cause. 鈥淲omen have expressed real happiness and satisfaction at being part of this enterprise,鈥 Perera says. 鈥淭hey feel full partners.鈥
You too can feel like a partner in cleaning up the environment by taking these simple steps (from CCCEH):
For more information, check out CCCEH's or WE ACT's .