Feature Channels: Environmental Health

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1-Jul-2022 1:05 PM EDT
Prenatal Exposure to Chemicals in Consumer and Industrial Products Is Associated With Rising Liver Disease in Children
Mount Sinai Health System

The growing incidence of a potentially cancer-causing liver disease in children is associated with prenatal exposure to several endocrine-disrupting chemicals, Mount Sinai researchers report.

Released: 6-Jul-2022 9:50 AM EDT
To Reduce Carbon, Colleges Should Target Purchasing, Travel
Cornell University

Activities beyond campus – such as business air travel, student commutes and purchases of goods like lab equipment – account for more than 60% of Cornell University’s carbon emissions, according to new research that analyzed the university’s greenhouse gas consumption through the lens of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Released: 5-Jul-2022 4:15 PM EDT
Unchecked Emissions Could Double Heat-Related Child Mortality
University of Leeds

If carbon emissions are limited to slow temperature rise, up to an estimated 6,000 child deaths could be prevented in Africa each year, according to new research. A team of international scientists, led by the University of Leeds in collaboration with researchers at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), have shown that thousands of heat-related child deaths could be prevented if temperature increases are limited to the Paris Agreement’s 1.5ºC target through to 2050.

   
Newswise: Scientists Identify Gaps in the Protection of Vietnam’s Amphibians
Released: 5-Jul-2022 3:05 PM EDT
Scientists Identify Gaps in the Protection of Vietnam’s Amphibians
Pensoft Publishers

As was highlighted in the foreword to the renowned WWF Greater Mekong Report 2021, written by Prof. Dr. Thomas Ziegler, Curator for Herpetology, Ichthyology, and Invertebrates, at Cologne Zoo (Köln, Germany), there is an urgent need for more studies that identify the gaps in species conservation.

Released: 5-Jul-2022 2:20 PM EDT
Why Natural Gas Is Not a Bridge Technology
Ruhr-Universität Bochum

The study was headed by Professor Claudia Kemfert from the German Institute for Economic Research (DIW) and Leuphana University Lüneburg in collaboration with Franziska Hoffart from Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Fabian Präger from Technische Universität Berlin and Isabell Braunger and Hanna Brauers from the University of Flensburg.

Newswise: New NUS Centre for Hydrogen Innovations embarks on cutting-edge research to power a hydrogen economy
Released: 3-Jul-2022 11:05 PM EDT
New NUS Centre for Hydrogen Innovations embarks on cutting-edge research to power a hydrogen economy
National University of Singapore (NUS)

The National University of Singapore has established a new Centre for Hydrogen Innovations, supported by Temasek, with the aim of creating breakthrough technologies to make hydrogen commercially viable as a green energy source. The first of its kind in Southeast Asia, the new centre will develop capabilities to help reduce reliance on fossil fuels as a source of energy and will also nurture talent for a sustainable hydrogen economy.

   
Released: 1-Jul-2022 1:25 PM EDT
New Study Reveals Impact of Plastic on Small Mammals, as Four Out of Seven Species Identified as ‘Plastic Positive’
University of Sussex

Researchers investigating the exposure of small mammals to plastics in England and Wales have found traces in the feces of more than half of the species examined

Newswise: Scientists Find Greenhouse Gas Warming Likely Cause of Industrial-Era Sea Level Rise
Released: 1-Jul-2022 11:55 AM EDT
Scientists Find Greenhouse Gas Warming Likely Cause of Industrial-Era Sea Level Rise
University of New Mexico

An international team of scientists has developed an accurate record of preindustrial sea level utilizing precisely dated phreatic overgrowths on speleothems that provide a detailed history of Late Holocene sea-level change in Mallorca, Spain, an island in the western Mediterranean Sea. The results provide an unprecedented picture of sea level over the past 4,000 years, putting the preindustrial and modern global mean sea level (GMSL) histories in context.

Released: 30-Jun-2022 5:05 PM EDT
Emu Stands Tall at Detecting Bacteria Species
Rice University

Part of a gene is better than none when identifying a species of microbe. But for Rice University computer scientists, part was not nearly enough in their pursuit of a program to identify all the species in a microbiome.

Released: 30-Jun-2022 3:05 PM EDT
Public Health Falls Victim to Climate Change in Wake of U.S. Supreme Court Decision
American Thoracic Society (ATS)

For climate change, June 2022 has been a busy month. It brought unprecedented flooding in Yellowstone National Park, a severe heat wave with life threatening temperatures in the southwestern U.S. and wildfires, which destroyed lives as well as property across the country.

   
Released: 30-Jun-2022 1:05 PM EDT
New Review of Evidence Highlights Importance of Adequate Ventilation to Prevent Spread of Covid-19 in Indoor Settings
BMJ

Some public venues may need better ventilation to prevent the spread of covid-19 following growing evidence of the potential for ‘long distance’ airborne transmission of the disease, suggests research published by The BMJ today.

Newswise: Romantic Partners Can Influence Each Other’s Beliefs and Behaviors on Climate Change, New Yale Study Finds
Released: 29-Jun-2022 4:10 PM EDT
Romantic Partners Can Influence Each Other’s Beliefs and Behaviors on Climate Change, New Yale Study Finds
Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies

Few would argue that romantic partners have the potential to shift each other’s beliefs and behaviors, but what about their views on climate change specifically? Up until now there’s been little analysis of the dynamics of climate change conversations in romantic relationships and how the beliefs of one partner can influence the other.

   
Newswise: The World’s Rivers Are Changing, Here’s How
Released: 29-Jun-2022 4:00 PM EDT
The World’s Rivers Are Changing, Here’s How
Dartmouth College

The way rivers function is significantly affected by how much sediment they transport and where it gets deposited. River sediment — mostly sand, silt, and clay — plays a critical ecological role, as it provides habitat for organisms downstream and in estuaries.

Released: 29-Jun-2022 1:05 PM EDT
Valero Joins the Gulf of Mexico Alliance Gulf Star Program
Gulf of Mexico Alliance

Gulf Star investment from Valero will support school environmental stewardship with youth in Port Arthur, Texas

Released: 28-Jun-2022 4:05 PM EDT
Study Shows Chemical’s Extent in Fairbanks Winter Air
University of Alaska Fairbanks

A chemical compound discovered in 2019 in Fairbanks’ wintertime air accounts for a significant portion of the community’s fine particulate pollution, according to new research that seeks to better understand the causes and makeup of the dirty air.

Released: 28-Jun-2022 2:05 PM EDT
Increasing Heat Waves Affect Up to Half a Billion People
University of Gothenburg

Climate change is a reality and extremely high temperatures have been reported by India and Pakistan in the spring.

   
Released: 27-Jun-2022 1:45 PM EDT
The latest expert commentary on SCOTUS decisions, including the overturn of Roe v. Wade
Newswise

The latest expert commentary and research on SCOTUS decisions, including the overturn of Roe v. Wade

       
Newswise: Repairing Nature with DNA Technology
Released: 27-Jun-2022 12:35 PM EDT
Repairing Nature with DNA Technology
Flinders University

The monumental global task to restore degraded ecosystems will need to include sophisticated technologies such as environmental DNA monitoring to understand and support the recovery of complex biospheres, international researchers say.

Newswise: Specific Environmental Exposures may Help Predict Increased Risk of Death from Cardiovascular Disease
21-Jun-2022 10:00 AM EDT
Specific Environmental Exposures may Help Predict Increased Risk of Death from Cardiovascular Disease
Mount Sinai Health System

A new study from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai quantifies the cardiovascular risk posed by exposure to specific environmental factors, showing, for example, that air pollution heightens the risk of heart disease mortality by 17 percent.

21-Jun-2022 10:20 AM EDT
Environmental Factors Predict Risk of Death
NYU Langone Health

Along with high blood pressure, diabetes, and smoking, environmental factors such as air pollution are highly predictive of people’s chances of dying, especially from heart attack and stroke, a new study shows.

   
Newswise: Investigating the Dynamics That Reshape Permafrost Environments
Released: 24-Jun-2022 1:05 PM EDT
Investigating the Dynamics That Reshape Permafrost Environments
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Researchers using monitoring data from Alaska permafrost found that vegetation and the snowpack that accumulates in winter control the temperatures below ground and thus the flow of water in the ground. By highlighting the link between above- and belowground properties and processes, these results will help improve scientists’ predictions of how the Arctic interacts with overall climate change.

Released: 22-Jun-2022 12:00 PM EDT
Reduce Carbon Footprint from Inhaled Anesthesia with New Guidance Published
American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA)

New guidance published today in Anaesthesia provides actionable steps to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions from inhaled anesthetics, particularly desflurane, which is commonly used in general anesthesia, and nitrous oxide (laughing gas).

Newswise: Nature Journal Publishes UTEP-Led Pollution Study
Released: 21-Jun-2022 5:05 PM EDT
Nature Journal Publishes UTEP-Led Pollution Study
University of Texas at El Paso

Residents of public housing throughout the United States experience higher levels of air pollution, according to an inter-institutional study led by a researcher from The University of Texas at El Paso that appeared in Scientific Reports, one of Nature’s portfolio of journals.

Newswise: Improving Air Quality, Health Screenings, and Public Health Messaging—Research Points to Better Strategies for Managing Future Epidemics
Released: 21-Jun-2022 5:05 AM EDT
Improving Air Quality, Health Screenings, and Public Health Messaging—Research Points to Better Strategies for Managing Future Epidemics
University of Oregon

Improving air quality, health screenings, and public health messaging—research points to better strategies for managing future epidemics

   
Released: 20-Jun-2022 4:05 PM EDT
Inhaled Toxic Particles Take Direct Route From Lungs to Brain - Study
University of Birmingham

Breathing in polluted air could lead to toxic particles being transported from lungs to brain, via the bloodstream – potentially contributing to brain disorders and neurological damage, a new study reveals.

Newswise: NSU’s on-Shore Coral Nursery Expanding Its Role
Released: 20-Jun-2022 1:30 PM EDT
NSU’s on-Shore Coral Nursery Expanding Its Role
Nova Southeastern University

Back in 2019, research scientists at Nova Southeastern University’s (NSU) Halmos College of Arts and Sciences joined forces with colleagues on an ambitious project to save at-risk corals. As that project has progressed, NSU is now making its coral nursery available for other similar projects.

14-Jun-2022 3:45 PM EDT
Rutgers & Harvard Scientists Develop Antimicrobial, Plant-Based Food Wrap Designed to Replace Plastic
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Aiming to produce environmentally friendly alternatives to plastic food wrap and containers, a Rutgers scientist has developed a biodegradable, plant-based coating that can be sprayed on foods, guarding against pathogenic and spoilage microorganisms and transportation damage.

Released: 17-Jun-2022 12:05 PM EDT
Biogas and biomethane supply chains leak twice as much methane as first thought
Imperial College London

Although biogas and biomethane remain climate-friendlier than non-renewable alternatives, the researchers call for better monitoring and fixing of leaks to ensure biogas and biomethane continue to live up to their green credentials.

Newswise: Kawasaki Disease Rates Dropped During COVID-19 Pandemic
15-Jun-2022 3:05 PM EDT
Kawasaki Disease Rates Dropped During COVID-19 Pandemic
UC San Diego Health

UC San Diego researchers report significant decrease in national cases of Kawasaki disease during COVID-19 pandemic; findings hint at origins of disease.

Released: 17-Jun-2022 10:55 AM EDT
Scientists Say Global Biodiversity Framework Falls Short on Chemicals and Other Contaminants
Biodiversity Research Institute (BRI)

BRI is part of an international group of scientists who published a joint letter in Science, just prior to the next round of international negotiations on the Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework. This letter urges more attention to the diversity of contaminants that pollute the environment and adversely impact biodiversity.

Newswise: Chemical Pollution Threatens Biodiversity
Released: 17-Jun-2022 7:05 AM EDT
Chemical Pollution Threatens Biodiversity
University of Vienna

Environmental chemical pollution threatens biodiversity. However, the complexity of this pollution remains insufficiently recognised by decision-makers - this is what international researchers led by Gabriel Sigmund from the University of Vienna and Ksenia Groh from the Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology (Eawag) argue in the most recent issue of “Science”. Their letter appears shortly before the international negotiations on the “post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework”. These will take place from 21st of June in Nairobi (Kenya).

Released: 16-Jun-2022 5:50 PM EDT
New Global Biodiversity Framework Falls Short on Chemicals
University of Toronto

Environmental scientists, ecologists, and policy experts argue in a letter published today in Science that the proposed Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework – a new international agreement to protect biodiversity – fails to account for the totality of chemical pollutants that threaten the health of ecosystems worldwide.

Newswise:Video Embedded study-humans-responsible-for-over-90-of-world-s-oil-slicks
VIDEO
Released: 16-Jun-2022 4:10 PM EDT
Study: Humans Responsible for Over 90% of World's Oil Slicks
Florida State University

A team of U.S. and Chinese scientists mapping oil pollution across the Earth’s oceans has found that more than 90% of chronic oil slicks come from human sources, a much higher proportion than previously estimated. Their research, published in Science, is a major update from previous investigations into marine oil pollution, which estimated that about half came from human sources and half from natural sources.

Released: 16-Jun-2022 11:05 AM EDT
Leading Experts, Officials to Discuss Threats and Solutions for Clean Water
Stony Brook University

A full day of dialogue and scientific presentations by national experts concerning problems and solutions associated with wastewater, nitrogen pollution, PFAS forever chemicals, treatment of drinking water, next generation clean water technologies and other topics will take place during the Clean Water Symposium.

Released: 16-Jun-2022 10:35 AM EDT
A Decade Later, Some Veterans Find It Hard to Breathe
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A decade after the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, some veterans find themselves with mysterious lung issues, seemingly attributable to exposure to burn pits.

Released: 14-Jun-2022 1:05 PM EDT
UCI-Led Study Finds Prolonged, Low-Level Radon Exposure Still a Leading Cause of Lung Cancer
University of California, Irvine

A study led by the University of California, Irvine  shows a strong relationship between prolonged exposure to low levels of radon and lung cancer, indicating a need for enhanced protection measures.  Radon gas in the air decays into tiny radioactive particles which can damage lung cells and lead to cancer.

Newswise: Patients With Chronic Illnesses From WTC Exposures More Likely to Suffer “Long-Term” Covid
Released: 13-Jun-2022 2:55 PM EDT
Patients With Chronic Illnesses From WTC Exposures More Likely to Suffer “Long-Term” Covid
Stony Brook University

A study of 1,280 patients treated and monitored at the Stony Brook World Trade Center Health and Wellness Program who also contracted Covid-19 reveals that responders who have suffered from chronic conditions from WTC exposures more often have "Long-Covid" than those responders without chronic illnesses.

Released: 10-Jun-2022 12:05 PM EDT
Air Pollution Gets Worse During Winter at Airports
McGill University

Air pollution kills approximately 7 million people every year worldwide.

Released: 9-Jun-2022 12:05 AM EDT
Microplastics in the Indian Ocean
Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon

They may be tiny, but they pose a global problem for humans and the environment: microplastic particles. These are plastic particles with a diameter between one micron and five millimeters.

7-Jun-2022 12:05 PM EDT
Higher Socioeconomic Status Linked to Increased Air Pollution Exposure in China
University of Washington

For the first time, a University of Washington led team has uncovered that people living in China who have a higher socioeconomic status are actually more exposed to outdoor air pollution, also known as ambient air pollution. This finding runs contrary to existing studies conducted throughout North America, which have shown that higher pollution levels tend to be experienced among people with lower socioeconomic status.

Released: 6-Jun-2022 7:05 PM EDT
German study links long-term exposure to air pollution before the pandemic to greater risk of severe COVID-19
European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care

Long-term exposure to air pollution is linked to a greater risk of severe COVID-19, new research being presented at Euroanaesthesia, the annual meeting of the European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care (ESAIC) in Milan, Italy (4-6 June), finds.

Released: 2-Jun-2022 3:10 PM EDT
Microbiome Investigations, E-cigarette Toxicity Testing, and More Featured in June 2022 Toxicological Sciences
Society of Toxicology

The June 2022 issue of Toxicological Sciences contains cutting-edge toxicology research in topics such as biomarkers; DART; and emerging technologies, methods, and models.

Newswise: Can a moss help clean up waterways?
Released: 2-Jun-2022 8:00 AM EDT
Can a moss help clean up waterways?
American Society of Agronomy (ASA), Crop Science Society of America (CSSA), Soil Science Society of America (SSSA)

The high surface area of willow moss helps it absorb polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons

Released: 1-Jun-2022 4:05 PM EDT
Long-Banned Toxic Chemicals Remain a Global Threat
University of Toronto

A new analysis by researchers at Masaryk University, the University of Toronto, and NRDC (Natural Resources Defense Council) has found most countries are not on track to remove their stocks of highly hazardous polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) by the 2028 deadline set forth in the Stockholm Convention, the global chemicals management treaty.

Released: 1-Jun-2022 2:05 AM EDT
Water Treatment Efficiently Removes Nanoplastics
Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology: ETH

It’s a hot topic, at least on social media: tiny plastic particles allegedly end up not only in oceans and lakes, but also in drinking water – and, yes, even in bottled mineral water.

Released: 1-Jun-2022 1:50 AM EDT
Research Confirms Effectiveness of Oil Dispersants
Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences

Marine oil spills are one of the most direct, and harmful, examples of the toll that the extraction of fossil fuels can take on the environment.



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