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Editorial
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Volume 351:1132-1134 September 9, 2004 Number 11
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Air Pollution and Health — Good News and Bad
C. Arden Pope, III, Ph.D.

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 by Gauderman, W. J.
-PubMed Citation
Early concerns regarding the health-related effects of air pollution originated from severe episodes in Meuse Valley, Belgium, in 1930; Donora, Pennsylvania, in 1948; and London, in 1952. Although the overall effects of these episodes continue to be debated, well-documented, episode-related increases in morbidity and mortality from cardiopulmonary causes provided dramatic evidence that extremely high concentrations of air pollution can have serious adverse effects on health. Early public-policy efforts to improve air quality in the United States, Britain, and elsewhere were largely attempts to avert such "killer" episodes of air pollution. In the United States, a series of national legislative and . . . [Full Text of this Article]


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From Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah.


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