When Air Becomes Death

A chest surgeon shares an alarming first-hand account of this public health emergency

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A chest surgeon shares an alarming first-hand account of this public health emergency

The process of breathing starts at birth and continues until death. We breathe around 25,000 times every day, inhaling 10,000 or more litres of air every day. It is a basic body function meant to sustain life. But today, breathing kills: it takes the lives of approximately seven million people prematurely every year globally. This is because of the presence of pollutants in the air, which are poison for our body and seriously damage our health. Dr Maria Neira, the World Health Organization’s air pollution director, has called it “a global public health emergency”. Ninety-eight per cent of India’s children breathe air that is inferior to the WHO standards. Nearly 25 per cent deaths in children under five are directly or indirectly related to air pollution.

As a chest surgeon, I have been operating on lungs for over 30 years and have noticed a drastic change in their colour. Normal, healthy lungs are supposed to be pink but it is a rarity for me to see pink lungs today, even among teenagers. The black deposits visible on the surface of lungs are a grim reminder of the presence of poison in the air we are breathing.

The pollutants in the air are particulate matter (PM) and gaseous substances. PM is divided as per its size into PM10, PM2.5 or PM<1 (these are micron sizes, approximately one thirtieth the width of the average human hair). PM10 gets trapped in our nose or windpipe and is exhaled through coughing but PM2.5 and smaller sizes go down to the most peripheral part of our lungs and get deposited there. They induce severe local reactions and release a large number of chemicals that go into the blood and reach every organ in the body through blood circulation, causing damage on a long-term basis. The gaseous matter in the air consists of carbon monoxide (CO), oxides of sulphur and nitrogen (SO2 and NO2), organic compounds, hydrocarbons, ozone and other substances, many of which are proven cancer-causing agents. Like PM,...

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