{"id":2932,"date":"2008-05-07T14:44:47","date_gmt":"2008-05-07T20:44:47","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wordpress-367309-1145705.cloudwaysapps.com\/2008\/05\/07\/environmental-defense-fund-asthma-and-idling-a-bad-combination\/"},"modified":"2008-05-07T14:44:47","modified_gmt":"2008-05-07T20:44:47","slug":"environmental-defense-fund-asthma-and-idling-a-bad-combination","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sustainablog.org\/articles\/environmental-defense-fund-asthma-and-idling-a-bad-combination\/","title":{"rendered":"Environmental Defense Fund: Asthma and Idling – A Bad Combination"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"idling_suv_child_250.jpg\"<\/a>Today’s post is by Mel Peffers<\/a>, a project manager in the Living Cities program at Environmental Defense Fund.<\/em><\/p>\n

May 6 was World Asthma Day<\/a>. Since car exhaust can lead to asthma as well as global warming, we thought it would be a good day to highlight the importance of not idling your car or truck engine.<\/p>\n

What makes idling especially bad for health is that drivers tend to idle in gathering places – by sidewalks, schools, playgrounds, homes, and offices. Breathing in pollution close to the source is more dangerous than farther away.<\/p>\n

Take a look at the evidence.<\/p>\n

Tailpipe Exhaust May Cause<\/em> Asthma<\/h3>\n

Tailpipe exhaust from both gasoline- and diesel-burning vehicles contains the pollutants that produce ozone<\/a> when combined with sunlight and heat. Ozone occurs mostly during the summer months. A warming planet means more hot days, and thus more ozone.<\/p>\n

Breathing in ozone irritates and inflames your lungs<\/a>, and repeated exposure can reduce lung function. There\u2019s a lot of evidence that ozone makes asthma worse<\/a>. But the Children\u2019s Health Study<\/a> in California found evidence that ozone causes<\/em> asthma<\/a>. The study also found that children can suffer irreversible lung damage<\/a> as adults from breathing smog.<\/p>\n

On top of that, diesel exhaust contains particulate matter (soot). This has long been known to cause a variety of health problems, including aggravated asthma (see CARB report on health effects [PDF]<\/a>). But as with ozone, there is evidence that diesel exhaust particles may cause<\/em> asthma<\/a>, and not just worsen it.<\/p>\n

California kids aren\u2019t the only ones to suffer from tailpipe-induced asthma. A 2005 NYU Medical Center study showed that asthma symptoms among children in the South Bronx doubled on high traffic days<\/a>.<\/p>\n

Conversely, reducing ozone can improve asthma rates. During the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, the city closed downtown to private cars for 17 days. During this time, daily peak ozone levels dropped more than a quarter and hospitalizations for asthma fell<\/a> by almost one-fifth.<\/p>\n

Fight Global Warming, Save Money<\/h3>\n

There\u2019s no reason to idle your vehicle engine. As I explained my previous post<\/a>:<\/p>\n