City
Epaper

Exposure to air pollution can make you more aggressive

By IANS | Published: October 04, 2019 1:48 PM

Researchers have found that breathing polluted air does not only make you sick, but it could also make you more aggressive.

Open in App

The research team from the Colorado State University found that strong links between short-term exposure to air pollution and aggressive behaviour, in the form of aggravated assaults and other violent crimes across the continental US.

The results were derived from daily Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) crime statistics and an eight-year detailed map of daily US air pollution.

"We're talking about crimes that might not even be physical, you can assault someone verbally, when you're exposed to more pollution, you become marginally more aggressive, so those altercations, some things that may not have escalated, do escalate," said the study's researcher Ander Wilson.

For the study, researchers cross-analysed three highly detailed datasets: daily criminal activity; daily county-level air pollution from 2006-2013 and daily data on wildfire smoke plumes from satellite imagery.

Air pollution scientists typically measure rates of pollution through concentrations of ozone or breathable particulate matter (PM) 2.5 microns in diameter or smaller, which has documented associations with health effects.

According to the researchers, 83 per cent of crimes considered "violent" by the FBI were categorised as assaults in crime databases. In the study, they observed whether crimes occurred inside or outside the home.

They found that 56 per cent of violent crimes and 60 per cent of assaults occurred within the home.

The research results showed that a 10 microgram-per-cubic-meter increased in same-day exposure to PM2.5 was associated with a 1.4 per cent increased in violent crimes, nearly all of which was driven by crimes categorised as assaults.

Researchers also found that a 0.01 parts-per-million increased in same-day exposure to ozone was associated with a 0.97 per cent increased in violent crime, or a 1.15 per cent increased in assaults.

Changes in these air pollution measures had no statistically significant effect on any other category of crime.

The researchers made no claims on the physiological, mechanistic relationship of how exposure to pollution leads someone to become more aggressive; their results only show a strong correlative relationship between such crimes and levels of air pollution.

The study is set to be published in a forthcoming edition of the Journal of Environmental Economics and Management.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: usFBIAnder WilsonColorado State UniversityFederal Bureau Of Investigation
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUS: 12-Year-Old Boy Receives World's First Commercially Approved Gene Therapy for Sickle Cell Disease

Social ViralTornado in US: Dashcam Records Terrifying Video of Cyclonic Storm Devastating Warehouse in Nebraska

InternationalDog Attack in US: Police Officer Shoots at Pack of Pit Bulls as They Maul Man in Philadelphia; Disturbing Video Goes Viral

National‘Unwarranted, Unsubstantiated Claims’: India on the Washington Post Report Identifying RAW Official in Pannun Assassination Case

InternationalUS Shooting: Three Police Officers Shot Dead in Charlotte, North Carolina

स्वास्थ्य Realted Stories

HealthLack of education, misconceptions on asthma hindering treatment: Doctors

HealthElderly woman weighing 102 kgs undergoes bilateral knee replacement in Noida

HealthGood News! Scientists Develop All-in-One Vaccine Effective Against Current and Future Coronavirus Variants

HealthAsthma can negatively affect brain functions: Experts

HealthRepurposed cancer drug to help replace insulin therapy for diabetes