The 2004 closure of a coal-burning power plant in Tongliang, China
provided the opportunity to investigate the benefits to development and
the impacts on BDNF associated with decreased levels of exposure to PAH.
This study has linked decreases in air pollution with decreased levels
of PAH-DNA adducts in cord blood, a biological marker of exposure, and
reported an association between PAH exposure and adverse developmental
outcomes in children born before the plant closure. Link to the article on
Science Codex.
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Air Pollution in Tongliang, China, when the plant was operational |
Deliang Tang, MD, DrPH, and his colleagues followed two groups of
mother-child pairs from pregnancy into early childhood. One of the
groups was comprised of mothers pregnant while the coal power plant was
still open and the other after it closed. Developmental delay was
determined using a standardized test, the Gesell Developmental Schedule
(GDS), which was adapted for the Chinese population. The GDS assesses
children in four areas: motor skills, learned behaviors, language, and
social adaptation.
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Air Pollution in Tongliang, China, after the plant closure |
"The key to limiting the health impacts of environmental exposures is
policy change supported by scientific evidence. These findings indicate
that regulation can rapidly decrease exposure and improve health
outcomes among the most sensitive populations, providing support for
implementing additional measures such as the closure of the Tongliang
coal-fired power plant," says Dr. Tang, director of the China studies at
the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health and associate
professor of Environmental Health Sciences at the Mailman School.
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