Researchers alert: Polluted air increases mental illness

The exposure to polluted air is linked to the increasing gravity of mental illness, according to the most comprehensive study of this type. The study, which included 13 thousand people in London, found that relatively low exposure to nitrogen dioxide led to a 32 - percent increase in the risk of needed treatment [...]
The study, which included 13 thousand people in London, found that relatively low exposure to nitrogen dioxide led to a 32 - percent increase in the risk of community - based treatment and 18 percent risk of hospital admission.
Researchers said the findings were possible to implement in most of the developed cities, and the air pollution ban would be beneficial for millions of people, reports Guardian, Periscope.
The polluted sky is editorable, and on a large scale, also, reducing population exposure --” said Joan Newbury from the University of Bristol, who led the study.
We know there are interventions that can be used, such as expanding areas with small emissions. An individual's mental health interventions are actually very difficult. ”
The study used the frequency of hospital admission or visits to community doctors as a measure of gravity.
Researchers calculated that the only reduction of a small pollutants could reduce the disease and save millions of people.
The air pollution level in Pristina is also very heavy in many days during the year.
Other studies have shown that rising polluted air dramatically increases depression and anxiety. There is also a link between polluted air and increased suicide rates. /Periscope











