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Over a million premature deaths in India and China in 2015 due to air pollution, reveals global study

New Delhi (ISJ) ? China and India together were responsible for some 1.1 million premature deaths from air pollution in 2015, reveals a global report.� These two countries together accounted for over half of the total global deaths attributable to air pollution.

According to the first annual report on the State of Global Air 2017, air pollution is the leading environmental cause of death worldwide and 92% of the world?s population lives in areas with unhealthy air.� Long-term exposure to fine particulate matter– the most significant element of air pollution– contributed to 4.2 million premature deaths and to a loss of 103 million healthy years of life in 2015, making air pollution the 5th highest cause of death among all health risks, including smoking, diet, and high blood pressure, reveals the report prepared by Massachusetts, United States-based Health Effects Institute in cooperation with the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washington and the University of British Columbia.

?We are seeing increasing air pollution problems worldwide, and this new report and website details why that air pollution is a major contributor to early death,? said Dan Greenbaum, President of the Health Effects Institute (HEI1 ), the global research institute that designed and implemented the study. ?The trends we report show that we have seen progress in some parts of the world ? but serious challenges remain.?

IHME is an independent population health research center that publishes the annual Global Burden of Diseases (GBD2 ), a systematic scientific effort to quantify the magnitude of health loss from all major diseases, injuries, and risk factors in populations across the world; its results are published each year in The Lancet medical journal.

In 2015, the highest concentrations of combustion-related — fine particulate matter were in South and Southeast Asia, China and Central and Western Sub-Saharan Africa. Household solid fuel use, coal-fired power plants, transportation, and open burning of agricultural and other wastes are among the most important contributors to outdoor air pollution.

?The Global Burden of Disease leads a growing worldwide consensus ? among the WHO, World Bank, International Energy Agency and others ? that air pollution poses a major global public health challenges,? said Bob O?Keefe, Vice President of HEI and Chair of Clean Air Asia. ?Nowhere is that risk more evident than in the rapidly growing economies of Asia.?

Although there are many parts of the world where air pollution has grown worse, there has also been improvement in the US and Europe. The US Clean Air Act and actions by the European Commission have made substantial progress in reducing people exposed to PM pollution since 1990. The US has experienced a reduction of about 27% in average annual population exposures to fine particulate matter with smaller declines in Europe. Yet some 88,000 Americans and 258,000 Europeans still face increased risks of dying early due to PM levels today.

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