Monday, October 12, 2009

Air Pollution Linked to Low IQ in Children

While many physicians underestimate the role of minimizing toxicity in the body and damage, how nice show for the search to see these effects. Researchers have recently discovered that there are mothers who breathe more air pollution during pregnancy may have children with low IQ.
Two hundred and forty-nine children were examined, and the difference in IQ between the group of high pollution and low pollution group was about four or five points. Four to five points may not seem like much, but if you understand that only thirty points can mean the difference between genius and notes, you understand the meaning.
Patrick Breysse, an environmental health specialist at Johns Hopkins School 'of Public Health, believes that air quality may be one reason why the rich kids tend to do better in school than children from poorer neighborhoods, as poorest households usually live most polluted areas.
And 'interesting if it were only for air pollution into account in this study. It would be curious to see the results when they accounted for things like organic food, pesticide-laced verses natural foods, processed foods or beverages such as nutrient-rich fruit or vegetable juices instead of coffee or coke . Although only a few of these immune system, such habits are also consumed more regularly in low-income areas.
The implication is that larger picture chemical toxins that pollute our environment is affecting our bodies and make us at least a little 'mentally slow. Pesticides and chemicals in processed foods and soft drinks also qualify as chemical toxins.
Would not it be interesting if the majority of people would actually be close to the level of genius, rank, even if not for the consistent exposure to chemicals and poisons of all kinds in the womb and throughout life?
When air pollution accounts for four or five points, it is easy to see where the lack of pesticides and chemicals ridden lightly processed should add another five or maybe ten points. The absence of mercury, a toxin known to affect the brain and are found in vaccines and dental fillings could easily tack on another five points. The list of toxins known to modern man and regularly put on his body is amazing, and their reduction would be quite simple, if we made a concerted effort.
Even doctors are catching on and understanding of what they thought was harmless, not really.
Dr. Michael Msall, a pediatrician at the University of Chicago, said: "We are learning more and more about low exposure dose, and how things, of course, we can not be a free ride."
A low IQ was not found only researchers associated with air pollution. In previous studies, researchers found that exposure to it in the womb was linked to genetic mutations that the risk of cancer, a smaller head and higher infant birth weight can actually reduce the air. Researchers air pollution linked with developmental delays of three and asthma in children.

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