Dirty Air Correlates with Lower Grades in Texas Schoolchildren
Fourth and fifth graders in El Paso, Texas, are more likely to have lower grade point averages if heavily exposed to contaminated air at home, according to a new study.
In the study, published this month in the , the authors said that air toxics may not cause dramatic drops in school performance but, nonetheless, the results were “disturbing.”
Others have found similar links between air pollution and academic performance.
Three months ago Columbia University's Perera and colleagues born to mothers in poverty and exposed to certain air toxics during pregnancy had lower IQs. Perera, tracking the mothers and children since before birth, said the pollution exposure prior to birth is more strongly linked to learning and behavioral problems.
Other studies support this—in February Calderón-Garcidueñas and colleagues reported Mexico City smog to impaired short-term memory and IQ in children.
El Paso’s 24-hour PM10 average is about 233 micrograms per cubic meter of air, according to the latest from 2013, which was eighth highest among more than 500 U.S. cities. El Paso, along with Laredo, has the highest carbon monoxide levels in Texas.
bbienkowski@ehn.org
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