This is your brain on air pollution Mara Neira

There is something we desperately need

that we cannot stop doing:

it is breathing.

Do you want to try?

Why don’t we stop breathing together

for, let’s say, even 10 seconds.

Is that OK?

Let’s do it.

Get ready … OK, now!

Oof, difficult, isn’t it?

Well, this is an incredible number

that will again take your breath away:

seven.

Seven what?

Seven million premature deaths a year

caused by exposure to the bad quality
of the air we breathe.

Imagine – it’s like more than
the entire population of my dear Madrid

will be wiped out in one year.

And you may ask:

Has this information been disclosed?

Has this information
been publicized, distributed?

Well, yes.

We have at the moment
more than 70,000 scientific papers

examining the relationship
between air pollution and our health,

and the global media has been
regularly covering this issue.

In fact, in a relatively
short period of time,

we have come to know

that air pollution is having
a negative impact

on almost all our major organs.

Let’s start by the lungs.

When we think about air pollution,
we always think about the lungs.

In fact, every time we take a breath,

we are inhaling toxic pollutants,

and our poor pink and lovely lungs

are suffering all of that.

Over the last 10 years,

we have put together a lot of knowledge
about what’s happened to that,

but let me tell you first
what is air pollution.

OK, air pollution
is a very complex mixture

of solid particles,

liquid droplets

and gaseous chemicals.

Imagine all of this mixture

that might come from sources
like household fuel burning

or industry or traffic

or many other indoor and outdoor sources.

And, of course, different
sources of pollution

will make different
mixtures of pollutants.

The point is that all of these toxins,

they can be combined in different ways.

Let’s take, for instance,
the particulate matter, the PM.

It can be a mixture that will include –

look at the cocktail here –

soil and road dust,

sea salt,

toxic metals,

diesel smog,

nitrates and sulfates,

and all of this toxic poison,
this delicious cocktail,

is going through our lungs every day,

and we are constantly exposed
to this air pollution

because we cannot stop breathing.

I mean, we can do it for 10 seconds,
but no more than that.

We cannot stop breathing

and, in addition,

we need, every day,
around 10,000 liters of air.

So we said that we have
seven million deaths

caused by air pollution every year.

Are we panicking?

Are we keeping calm?

Are we declaring a national disaster,
a global emergency?

Well, no, and in fact I’m asking myself
this question every day:

What is happening?

But here is something that maybe
will force us to react more quickly.

Air pollution is not just
affecting our lungs.

It’s affecting our brain as well.

This is our brain.

Beautiful.

We all have it.

We all need it.

Hopefully, we all use it –

(Laughter)

some more than others.

And in the last 10 years of history,

the research about the relationship
between air pollution

and our brain’s health

has been increased dramatically,

so maybe now our brain
is going up in smoke.

But let me tell you the evidence,

what we know so far
about air pollution in our brain.

First, there is an emerging
body of evidence

regarding the potential harmful effects

of air pollutants

into our central nervous system.

But let’s go back to the toxic particles.

Remember?

We left them at the lungs,

enjoying life,

polluting everything.

But now the smallest of them,

they can cross into the bloodstream,

and from the bloodstream,
pumped by the heart,

they can reach the whole body,

threatening every organ,

including the brain.

We used to say that
air pollution has no borders,

and it’s true as well within our bodies,

because air pollutants will cross
the placental barrier

and reach the fetus and alter
the cerebral cortex of our children

even before they take their first breath.

Second, several studies have suggested

that both prenatal and early childhood
long-term exposure to air pollution

will have a negative influence
on neural development,

will have lower cognitive test outcomes,

and there will be an influence as well,
a negative influence,

on some behavioral disorders like autism

and attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder.

In addition to that, some evidence found

that exposing our children’s
and young adults' brains

for a long time to particulate matter

will cause some reactions
like brain inflammation,

altering the neural response

and [also] leading to the influence
of more protein plaques

that are accumulating,

and those can increase
the risks for diseases

like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.

Ironic, isn’t it:

we are investing in our children’s future,

we are sending them to school
every day to expand their minds,

the society is investing
in their education,

and yet the air they breathe
while waiting for the school bus

is influencing negatively
the development of their brain.

Let’s go to the third: What about adults?

According to recent scientific evidence,

long-term exposure to particulate matter
will cause a cognitive decline

in study participants as they age.

And not only that,

if you expose them to long-term,
very fine particulate matter,

their brain will age more rapidly,

and they will have higher odds

of having small, silent strokes.

The last one – and I will not
give you more evidence,

because there is a ton of [it] –

some epidemiological studies
in animal models

have suggested that there might be
an increased risk of dementia

with sustained exposure to air pollutants.

So, almost everybody
is exposed to air pollution.

Whether you live in a rural area
or an urban area,

whether you live in a high-income country
or a low-income country,

everybody’s brains, including yours,

are at risk.

As a medical doctor,

I have been dedicating
the last more than 20 years now

of my professional life

to raise awareness about
public health issues,

public health risks,

at the World Health Organization,

and I know that the knowledge is there
and the solutions as well.

Sure, some places
are more polluted than others,

but this a global issue,

and no individual, no city,
no group, no country, no region

will be able to solve it alone.

We need very strong commitments
and very strong action by everyone:

civil society,

private sector,

even individuals.

We all have a role to play.

Yes, we need to influence
the way we consume,

the way we commute,

the way we use our energy.

And the good thing is that
all of those solutions are available.

The question is, if we postpone
action by one day,

there might be thousands
of lives that we will lose,

but if we postpone it by one year,

we might be losing again seven million.

So every policy maker, every politician,

needs to be aware of
the consequences on human health

of postponing their decisions.

In fact,

this is not the first time in history

that we are confronted
with the risks of this invisible killer.

This was London in 1952,

and as was done in London
in the ’50s and the ’60s,

governments and cities,

they need to take urgent action to stop
the terrible impact of air pollution.

Every politician must know that delaying
what they call the tough actions,

like reducing traffic in cities
or investing in public transport

and engaging in promoting
cycling in cities,

investing in renewable energy,

promoting cleaner energy
for cooking, cooling

and transportation and heating

are solutions that are very smart,

because, in fact, they reduce emissions,

they improve air quality
in line with WHO standards,

which are the standards
that will protect ourselves.

So in fact, all politicians that we need
these very strong political commitments

and political will from,

but [we need] all of them now.

Those who fail, who postpone action,

they have been requested even
to defend their position in court.

And from now on,

no politician will be able
to say, “I didn’t know.”

So the question here is:

How many lives,

loss of quality of life

and losing our brain power

are we ready to accept?

If the answer is “none,”

I will request that you,

while our brains are still functioning,
while we are still intelligent,

please exercise your right,
put pressure on your politicians

and make sure that they take action
to stop the sources of air pollution.

This is the first thing we need to do
to protect yourself

and to protect our beautiful brain.

Thank you very much.

(Applause)

我们迫切需要

一些我们不能停止做的事情:

它是呼吸。

想不想试一试?

我们为什么不一起停止呼吸

,比如说,哪怕是 10 秒钟。

那样行吗?

我们开始做吧。

准备好……好的,现在!

哦,很难,不是吗?

嗯,这是一个令人难以置信的数字

,再次让你大吃一惊:

七。

七什么?

每年有 700 万人

因暴露于
我们呼吸的空气质量差而过早死亡。

想象一下——这就像
我亲爱的马德里的全部人口

将在一年内被消灭。

你可能会问:

这些信息是否被披露过?

这些信息是否
已公开、分发?

嗯,是。

目前,我们有
超过 70,000 篇科学论文

研究
空气污染与我们的健康之间的关系

,全球媒体一直在
定期报道这个问题。

事实上,在相对
较短的时间内,

我们就

知道空气污染

对我们几乎所有的主要器官都产生了负面影响。

让我们从肺开始。

当我们想到空气污染时,
我们总是会想到肺。

事实上,每一次呼吸,

我们都在吸入有毒污染物,

而我们可怜的粉红色可爱的肺

正在遭受这一切的折磨。

在过去的 10 年里,

我们收集了很多
关于发生了什么的知识,

但让我先告诉你
什么是空气污染。

好的,空气污染

是固体颗粒、

液滴

和气态化学物质的非常复杂的混合物。

想象一下所有这些混合物

可能
来自家庭燃料燃烧

或工业或交通

或许多其他室内和室外来源。

当然,不同
的污染源

会产生不同
的污染物混合物。

关键是所有这些毒素,

它们可以以不同的方式组合。

让我们以
颗粒物 PM 为例。

它可以是一种混合物,其中包括——

看看这里的鸡尾酒——

土壤和道路灰尘、

海盐、

有毒金属、

柴油烟雾、

硝酸盐和硫酸盐

,所有这些有毒的毒物,
这种美味的鸡尾酒,

正在通过我们的 肺每天都在呼吸

,我们不断地暴露
在这种空气污染中,

因为我们无法停止呼吸。

我的意思是,我们可以做 10 秒,
但不能超过。

我们无法停止呼吸

,此外

,我们每天需要
大约 10,000 升空气。

所以我们说每年有
七百万人死于

空气污染。

我们在恐慌吗?

我们保持冷静吗?

我们是在宣布国家灾难,
还是全球紧急情况?

嗯,不,事实上我每天都在问自己
这个问题:

发生了什么?

但这里有一些东西可能
会迫使我们更快地做出反应。

空气污染不仅
影响我们的肺部。

它也影响着我们的大脑。

这是我们的大脑。

美丽的。

我们都有。

我们都需要它。

希望我们都使用它——

(笑声)

比其他人多一些。

在过去 10 年的历史中

,关于
空气污染

与我们大脑健康之间关系的研究

急剧增加,

所以也许现在我们的大脑
正在冒烟。

但让我告诉你证据,

到目前为止
我们对大脑中空气污染的了解。

首先,有
大量证据表明

空气污染物

对我们的中枢神经系统可能产生有害影响。

但让我们回到有毒颗粒。

记住?

我们把它们留在肺里,

享受生活,

污染一切。

但现在它们中最小的,

它们可以进入血液

,从血液中,
由心脏泵出,

它们可以到达全身,

威胁到

包括大脑在内的每一个器官。

我们常说
空气污染是无国界的,

在我们体内也是如此,

因为空气污染物会
穿过胎盘

屏障到达胎儿,

甚至在孩子第一次呼吸之前就改变了他们的大脑皮层。

其次,一些研究表明

,产前和儿童早期
长期暴露于空气污染

会对神经发育产生负面影响

认知测试结果会降低,

并且还会对某些人
产生负面影响

。 行为障碍,如自闭症

和注意力缺陷
多动障碍。

除此之外,一些证据发现

,将我们的儿童
和年轻人的大脑

长时间暴露于颗粒物

会导致一些反应,
如脑部炎症,

改变神经反应

,[也]导致
更多蛋白质斑块

的影响 积累

,这些会增加

患阿尔茨海默氏症和帕金森氏症等疾病的风险。

具有讽刺意味的是,不是吗:

我们正在为孩子的未来投资,

我们每天送他们上学
以扩展他们的思维

,社会正在
为他们的教育投资

,但他们
在等待校车时呼吸的空气却在影响着他们

消极地
影响他们大脑的发育。

再说第三个:大人呢?

根据最近的科学证据,随着年龄的增长,

长期接触颗粒物
会导致研究参与者的认知能力下降

不仅如此,

如果你让他们长期接触
非常细的颗粒物,

他们的大脑会老化得更快

,他们

发生小而无声中风的几率也会更高。

最后一个——我不会
给你更多的证据,

因为有很多[它]——

一些
动物模型的流行病学

研究表明,持续暴露于空气污染物可能会
增加患痴呆症的风险

因此,几乎每个人
都暴露在空气污染中。

无论你住在农村
还是城市,

无论你住在高收入国家
还是低收入国家,

每个人的大脑,包括你的大脑,

都处于危险之中。

作为一名医生,


在过去 20 多年

的职业生涯中一直

致力于在世界卫生组织提高对
公共卫生问题

、公共卫生风险的

认识,我知道知识就在那里
,解决方案 好。

当然,有些
地方比其他地方污染更严重,

但这是一个全球性问题

,任何个人、任何城市、
任何团体、任何国家、任何

地区都无法单独解决。

我们需要每个人做出非常坚定的承诺
和非常坚定的行动:

民间社会、

私营部门,

甚至个人。

我们都可以发挥作用。

是的,我们需要影响
我们的

消费方式、

通勤方式和能源使用方式。

好消息是
所有这些解决方案都可用。

问题是,如果我们将
行动推迟一天,

我们可能
会失去数千条生命,

但如果我们推迟一年,

我们可能会再次失去七百万条生命。

因此,每位政策制定者、每位政治家都

需要意识到推迟决策
对人类健康的影响

事实上,

这并不是我们历史上第一次

面临这个隐形杀手的风险。

这是 1952 年的伦敦

,正如
50 年代和 60 年代在伦敦所做的那样,

政府和

城市需要采取紧急行动来阻止
空气污染的可怕影响。

每个政治家都必须知道,推迟
他们所谓的强硬行动,

例如减少城市交通
或投资公共交通


促进城市骑自行车、

投资可再生能源、

推广
用于烹饪、制冷

和运输和供暖的清洁能源

是解决方案 非常聪明,

因为事实上,它们减少了排放

,改善
了符合世界卫生组织标准的空气质量,

这些
标准将保护我们自己。

所以事实上,我们需要
这些非常强大的政治承诺

和政治意愿的所有政客,

但 [我们现在需要] 所有人。

那些失败的、推迟行动的人,

他们甚至被要求
在法庭上捍卫自己的立场。

从现在开始,

任何政客都
不能说“我不知道”。

所以这里的问题是:我们准备好接受

多少生命、生活

质量的

丧失和脑力的丧失

如果答案是“没有”,

我会要求你,

在我们的大脑还在运转
、我们还很聪明的时候,

请行使你的权利,
向你的政客施加压力,

并确保他们采取
行动阻止空气来源 污染。

这是我们需要做的第一件事
来保护自己

和保护我们美丽的大脑。

非常感谢你。

(掌声)