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  • Clean Air: The Effects of U.S. Power Plant Carbon Standards on Human Health

    May 4, 2015 /

    By Roberta Attanasio A little more than a year ago, the World Health Organization (WHO) reported that in 2012 around 7 million people died — accounting for one in eight of total global deaths — as a result of exposure to air pollution. These estimates more than doubled the previous ones, and confirmed that air pollution is now the world’s largest single environmental health risk. The WHO concluded that reducing air pollution globally could save millions of lives. But, what policy changes would be most effective at saving lives? The answer comes from a new study published in the journal Nature Climate Change (May 4, 2015.) The study, (US power plant…

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    Allergies in Young Children: Effects of Exposure to Multiple Air Pollutants During Prenatal and Early Life

    December 10, 2019

    Benzene, Leukemia and Lymphoma

    August 5, 2013

    What is Carbon Farming?

    August 8, 2013
  • Global Threats: Contamination of Surface Waters by Agricultural Insecticides

    April 26, 2015 /

    By Roberta Attanasio The use of agricultural insecticides — toxic substances developed to target and kill insects that damage crops — has sparked controversy since the dawn of the “chemical age”, which started in the 1950s. The benefits of agricultural insecticides — for example, increased food production — are undeniable. Unfortunately, along with benefits, there are considerable unwanted effects. Ideally, insecticides must be lethal to the target insects, but not to non-target species. However, these toxic substances do not target only insects — they target many more organisms, including man. Thus, the toxic brew of agricultural insecticides threatens the ecological integrity of aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. Indeed, agricultural systems play a…

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    Salmon Farming: The Chilean Massive Die-Off

    May 21, 2016

    Pharmaceuticals in Drinking Water?

    April 25, 2016

    Soils Are Threatened: Can We Halt The Problem?

    December 4, 2015
  • Prenatal Exposure to Air Pollutants: Links to Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

    April 11, 2015 /

    By Roberta Attanasio PHAs — short for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons — are bad actors: they’re toxic, ubiquitous pollutants that readily cross the placenta, causing damage to the fetal brain. Now, results from a new study show that PHA-induced fetal brain damage may lead to severe behavioral problems during early childhood, including aggression and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The deleterious effects of air pollution — greater risk of stroke, heart attacks and cognitive deterioration — are widely recognized. However, the new study assessed prenatal exposure and identified specific physical damage in the brain. The researchers used magnetic resonance imaging to measure the brains of 40 children from a cohort consisting…

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    Children exposed to air pollution are more likely to develop disease later in life

    March 1, 2021

    Autism and Air Pollution Go Together

    June 18, 2013

    Ozone, Plants and Heat Waves: Team Players in Adverse Health Effects

    July 23, 2013
  • The Global Travels of Chikungunya Virus: Is it Coming to You?

    March 30, 2015 /

    By Roberta Attanasio Chikungunya virus is spreading fast — worldwide. First described during an outbreak in southern Tanzania in 1952, it caused sporadic illness in Africa and large urban outbreaks in Thailand and India in the 1960s and 1970s. As of now, it has been identified in over 60 countries in Asia, Africa, Europe and Americas. The virus, which causes fever and severe joint pain, is transmitted to humans by the bites of infected female mosquitoes, most commonly by Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus — two species that can also transmit other mosquito-borne viruses, including dengue. There is no vaccine and no specific treatment for the infection. Gemma Handy aptly describes…

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    Do Sunscreen Products Harm the Coastal Marine Ecosystem?

    August 30, 2013

    Nature, Health, and Things in Between

    November 7, 2015

    Benzene, Leukemia and Lymphoma

    August 5, 2013
  • Food Additives, Microbiota, and Inflammation

    March 27, 2015 /

    By Roberta Attanasio “For centuries, additives have served useful functions in a variety of foods. Our ancestors used salt to preserve meats and fish, added herbs and spices to improve the flavor of foods, preserved fruit with sugar, and pickled cucumbers in a vinegar solution. Today, consumers demand and enjoy a food supply that is flavorful, nutritious, safe, convenient, colorful and affordable. Food additives and advances in technology help make that possible.” But, are food additives safe? Results from a recent study show that some food additives known as emulsifiers can alter the composition and location of the gut microbiota — the diverse population of 100 trillion bacteria that inhabit…

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    Embarrassing Facebook Posts May Cause Anguish

    December 10, 2013

    Tasmanian Devils: Contagious Cancer Drives the Risk of Extinction

    December 5, 2014

    Psychological Stress in Children: Effects on the Immune Response

    March 2, 2014
  • Small Predator Diversity Plays a Significant Role in the Spread of Infectious Diseases

    March 23, 2015 /

    By Roberta Attanasio Biodiversity is a term coined to describe the diversity of all living things, from human beings to microorganisms. A New York Times editorial published almost two decades ago aptly describes the importance of the biodiversity concept: “Biodiversity is a hugely important concept that stresses the coherence and interdependence of all forms of life on earth and a new willingness to appraise the meaning of that interdependence, not just for humans but for every one of life’s component parts.” The editorial goes on to illustrate the alarming effects of biodiversity loss: “Biodiversity is a way of talking about what scientists have long understood and a way of reminding…

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    Ivory Poaching Drives the Global Decline of African Elephants

    August 22, 2014

    Central Asia Large Mammals: Victims of (Cashmere) Fashion

    August 16, 2013

    Wasting Syndrome and Starfish Die-Off

    February 9, 2014
  • Climate Change: A Key Driver of the Syrian Conflict?

    March 11, 2015 /

    By Roberta Attanasio Climate change is happening here and now, with significant damage to natural systems and society. The shrinking of the Arctic sea ice, the melting of the Greenland and Antarctica ice sheets, the acidification of the oceans, the sea level rise, the shifting patterns of precipitation, and the amplified threat of wildfires, are some of its well-recognized effects. There are also significant concerns related to the consequences that climate change could have on freshwater availability and agricultural productivity worldwide — resulting in increasing poverty and further weakening of fragile governments. Indeed, climate change has been identified as a “threat multiplier” — it can exacerbate political instability in the…

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    Global Threats: The Spread of Crop Pests

    September 2, 2013

    Ozone, Plants and Heat Waves: Team Players in Adverse Health Effects

    July 23, 2013

    Soils Are Threatened: Can We Halt The Problem?

    December 4, 2015
  • Early Menopause: Links to Ubiquitous Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals

    February 23, 2015 /

    By Roberta Attanasio There are as many endocrine-disrupting chemicals (also called endocrine disruptors) as there are deleterious health effects caused by them. These chemicals mimic the body’s hormones and confuse our physiological systems — we respond to them with a series of inappropriate changes that, depending on the specific endocrine disruptor, lead to the development of obesity, cancer, malformation of sex organs, and more. They are pervasive in the environment — they’re found in the soil, air and water throughout the world — and many persist for long periods of time. Thus, it’s not surprising that, in 2013, the impact of endocrine disruptors on human health was defined as a…

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    Environmental Toxins and Damage to the Immune System: Transgenerational Effects

    December 5, 2019

    Do Sunscreen Products Harm the Coastal Marine Ecosystem?

    August 30, 2013

    TB Unmasked: Healthcare Workers and the Global Tuberculosis Epidemic

    March 21, 2015
  • E-Cigarettes and Vaping May Cause Lung Damage and Impaired Immune Responses

    February 14, 2015 /

    By Roberta Attanasio A few months ago, Oxford Dictionaries announced “vape” as its international Word of the Year 2014 – language research conducted by their editors revealed that its use in 2014 had more than doubled compared to 2013 (and increased by 30-fold since 2012), mostly because of the rapidly growing popularity of electronic cigarettes and the expanding debate over their safety. Although e-cigarettes are portrayed as devices that can help adult smokers quit while providing a safe alternative to tobacco smoking, mounting evidence shows that these devices may cause considerable harm. Indeed, about two weeks ago, California health officials said that e-cigarettes represent a rising public-health risk that threaten…

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    Pharmaceuticals in Drinking Water?

    April 25, 2016

    The $11 Trillion Reward

    August 7, 2013

    The Great Global Die-Off: Frogs and Lymphocytes

    October 28, 2013
  • Tasmanian Devils: Contagious Cancer Drives the Risk of Extinction

    December 5, 2014 /

    By Roberta Attanasio In November 2013, a team of biologists scattered 15 plastic cylinders in the fields of Maria Island, three miles off the east coast of the Australian island state of Tasmania. Each cylinder contained a healthy Tasmanian devil, a marsupial  species that until then lived only in Tasmania. Soon, the 15 devils emerged from the containers, becoming the first ever to inhabit Maria Island. The biologists were planning to take more devils to the island. Why? To establish a healthy colony, needed for the survival of the entire species. The Tasmanian devil is on the brink of extinction because of an unusual disease — a contagious cancer that is spreading very quickly.…

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    A Toxoplasma’s Journey: From Cats to Sea Otters

    January 19, 2014

    Minute 319: The Delta of the Colorado River Gets a New Life

    March 19, 2014

    Ivory Poaching Drives the Global Decline of African Elephants

    August 22, 2014
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