Getting stuck in traffic causes a lot of stress, which is bad for mental health. It turns out, the health impact could be a lot deeper.
-by Cole Mellino
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Getting stuck in traffic causes a lot of stress, which is bad for mental health. It turns out, the health impact could be a lot deeper.
-by Cole Mellino
Poland shows a startling link:
Children in areas affected by high levels of emissions, on average, scored more poorly on intelligence tests and were more prone to depression, anxiety and attention problems than children growing up in cleaner air, separate research teams in New York, Boston, Beijing, and Krakow, Poland, found. And older men and women long exposed to higher levels of traffic-related particles and ozone had memory and reasoning problems that effectively added five years to their mental age, other university researchers in Boston reported this year. The emissions may also heighten the risk of Alzheimer’s disease and speed the effects of Parkinson’s disease.
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