Living in a polluted area is equal to smoking 150 cigarettes a year, charity warns

United States
Breaking News:
Washington DC
Monday, Dec 16, 2019
LIVING in the UK’s most polluted areas raises the risk of early death by the equivalent of smoking 150 cigs a year, a charity has warned.
The British Heart Foundation has called for air pollution to be declared a “public health emergency”.
Its analysis shows those in the Newham, Westminster, Kensington and Chelsea, and Islington areas of London are worst hit.
But a further six London boroughs are also badly affected by fine particulate matter (PM2.5).
Areas outside the capital hit include Slough, Dartford, Portsmouth, Medway, Luton, Gravesham and Thurrock. Around 11,000 coronary heart disease and stroke deaths each year in the UK are caused by particulate matter air pollution.
The BHF wants the next government to replace current EU air pollution limits with stricter, World Health Organisation ones.
Prostitute who earns £2,000 a week reveals the average penis size … and how much she enjoys work
What causes mouth ulcers and how to treat them with stuff you have at home
Guinness IS good for you – and here’s six surprising reasons why
Dr Keith Hopcroft explains the ten signs that suggest you DON’T have cancer
The truth about YOUR double chin, what’s really causing it – and the DAFT exercises that can help banish it
Tara Palmer-Tomkinson died of a ‘perforated ulcer and peritonitis’ – but do you know the symptoms?
The EU’s PM2.5 cap, which Britain easily meets, is 25mg per metre-cubed as an annual average. The WHO limit is 10mg.
The BHF’s Jacob West said: “Air pollution has not been treated with the seriousness it deserves.
“Legislation was passed to protect people from passive smoke, and similar decisive action must be taken on air pollution. The last government accepted that it is possible to implement tougher WHO air pollution limits, and the next government must now do so to protect the health of the nation.”