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from CHHS鈥檚 Department of Global and Community Health and her colleagues published one of the largest studies on labor and delivery in the U.S. in the . The study鈥攍ed by Dr. Pauline Mendola of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development鈥攅xamined the link between stillbirths and air pollution. Specifically, it looked at chronic and acute exposure to air pollution for 228,438 deliveries in twelve clinical locations over the span of six years.
The research team found that the risk for stillbirth鈥攍oss of pregnancy after twenty weeks gestation鈥攚as increased after both acute and chronic exposure, although it was more prevalent in the latter. One air pollutant, Ozone (O3), was associated with a 13-22% increased risk of stillbirth. These findings suggest that exposure to this pollutant may be responsible for 8,000 stillbirths in the U.S. per year 鈥 that鈥檚 approximately one-third of all U.S. stillbirths.
Pollack explains, 鈥淪tillbirths are a significant public health problem. Unfortunately, we can鈥檛 really change many factors related to stillbirths (e.g., genetics, pregnancy and birth complications). That鈥檚 why we wanted to determine if there was a link between stillbirths and exposure to common air pollutants. Finding this link and knowing how many stillbirths might be able to be avoided can provide an opportunity for intervention on a large scale.鈥
The research team suspects the true association might be even stronger than they observed due to the large size of the study. As next steps, they recommend additional studies鈥攑erhaps with more nuanced measurements of exposure鈥攖o see if their findings are confirmed.