








See Also
You Are What You Breathe: Air Quality and Your Health
(pdf 71 kb, 2 pages)
How
clean is my air?
View daily air
quality reports.
Air
Quality Monitoring
How DEQ measures
and evaluates air quality.
Contact DEQ
Regional
Office
Air Quality Managers
State
Office
Air Quality Division
Dr. Carl Brown
(208)
373-0206
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Air Quality: Health and Air Pollution
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| An
air pollutant is any substance in the air that can cause harm to
humans or the environment. Pollutants may be natural or manmade
and may take the form of solid particles, liquid droplets, or gases.
Examples of air pollutants are ozone (a primary ingredient in urban
smog), particulate matter, carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, sulfur
dioxide, and lead.
Breathing
elevated levels of air pollutants can adversely affect human health,
especially among children, the elderly, and those with heart or
lung diseases. Potential health problems include lung damage, birth
defects, nerve damage, reduced immunity, and an increased risk of
developing cancer. The following information provides an overview
of various air pollutants and their health impacts. |
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| Air Toxics |
| Air
toxics are a group of air pollutants that are known or suspected
to cause serious health problems. Examples of air toxics include
asbestos, benzene, chloroform, formadehyde,
lead, mercury and nickel
compounds, and perchloroethylene. more
People
exposed to air toxics at sufficient concentrations and durations
may have an increased chance of developing cancer or other serious
health problems including damage to the immune system as well as
neurological, reproductive (reduced fertility), developmental, and
respiratory problems. Like humans, animals also may experience health
problems if exposed to sufficient quantities of air toxics over
time. |
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How
are people exposed to air toxics? |
People
are exposed to toxic air pollutants in many ways such as:
- Breathing contaminated air
- Eating contaminated food products, such as fish
from contaminated waters; meat, milk, or eggs from animals that
fed on contaminated plants; and fruits and vegetables grown in
contaminated soil on which air toxics have been deposited
- Drinking water contaminated by toxic air pollutants
- Ingesting contaminated soil. Young children
are especially vulnerable because they often ingest soil from
their hands or from objects they place in their mouths
- Touching (making skin contact with) contaminated
soil, dust, or water (for example, during recreational use of
contaminated water bodies)
Once toxic
air pollutants enter the body, some persistent toxic air pollutants
accumulate in body tissues. Since predators typically accumulate
even greater pollutant concentrations than their contaminated prey,
people and other animals at the top of the food chain may be exposed
to higher concentrations of toxics than are found in water, air,
or soil alone. |
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For
More Information |
The
Health Effects Notebook for Hazardous Air Pollutants
EPA fact
sheets on the health effects of nearly every hazardous air pollutant
specified in the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990. |
Taking
Toxics Out of the Air
EPA publication
describing what air toxics are, where they come from, and how they
impact people and the environment. |
Air
Pollution and Health Risk (English) I Spanish
EPA's Web
site explaining how it determines when a risk from a hazardous substance
is serious. Learn how researchers estimate risk, and how the government
uses this information to develop regulations that limit exposure
to hazardous substances. |
Evaluating
Exposures to Toxic Air Pollutants: A Citizen's Guide (English) I
Spanish
Explains
the process EPA uses to determine the level and extent of exposure
to toxic air pollution. |
Risk
Assessment for Toxic Air Pollutants: A Citizen's Guide (English) I
Spanish
EPA's guide
to risk assessment, which is the process used to estimate the risk
of illness from human exposure to a specific toxic air pollutant.
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| Asbestos |
| Asbestos
is a mineral fiber that can only be identified with a special type
of microscope. In the past, various types of asbestos fibers were
added to a variety of products to strengthen them and to provide
heat insulation and fire resistance.
Most people
are exposed to small amounts of asbestos in their daily lives and
do not develop health problems. When disturbed, however, asbestos
can become an air toxic, releasing fibers which can be inhaled or
ingested. Asbestos fibers may be released into the air by the disturbance
of asbestos-containing material during product use, demolition work,
building or home maintenance, repair, and remodeling. Asbestos fibers
can remain in the lungs for a long time, increasing the risk of
disease.
Studies
of people who were exposed to asbestos in factories and shipyards
have shown that breathing high levels of asbestos fibers can lead
to an increased risk of:
-
lung
cancer;
-
mesothelioma,
a cancer of the lining of the chest and the abdominal cavity;
and
-
asbestosis,
in which the lungs become scarred with fibrous tissue.
Researchers
have not yet determined a safe level of exposure, but know that
the greater and longer the exposure, the greater risk of the contracting
an asbestos-related disease. Risks of lung cancer and mesothelioma
increase with the number of fibers inhaled. The risk of lung cancer
from inhaling asbestos fibers is also greater for smokers. People
who develop asbestosis have usually been exposed to high levels
of asbestos for a long time. The symptoms of these diseases do not
usually appear until about 20 to 30 years after the first exposure
to asbestos. |
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For
More Information |
| EPA's
Asbestos Web Site
Health
effects of exposure to asbestos, explanations of laws and regulations
that govern asbestos use, and lists of asbestos information resources
and contacts. |
Asbestos:
Health and Exposure
A pdf publication
of the EPA Office of Air Quality Planning Standards. |
EPA
Region 10 Asbestos Web Site
Asbestos
information specific to the Pacific Northwest, including Idaho.
EPA Region
10 Asbestos Coordinator
Raymond Nye,
(206) 553-4226; nye.raymond@epa.gov |
Asbestos
Abatement and Disposal in Idaho
DEQ's Web
page on EPA regulation of asbestos removal and disposal projects
in Idaho. |
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| Carbon
Monoxide |
| Carbon
monoxide (CO) is a colorless, odorless, and poisonous gas and one
of six "criteria pollutants" for which EPA
has established protective standards. Carbon monoxide forms when
the carbon in fuels does not completely burn. Vehicle exhaust contributes
roughly 60% of all CO emissions nationwide and up to 95% in cities.
Other sources include fuel combustion in industrial processes and
natural sources such as wildfires. Carbon monoxide concentrations
typically are highest during cold weather because cold temperatures
make combustion less complete and cause inversions that trap pollutants
low to the ground.
Carbon
monoxide enters the bloodstream through the lungs and binds chemically
to hemoglobin, the substance in blood that carries oxygen to cells.
In this way, CO interferes with the ability of the blood to transport
oxygen to organs and tissue throughout the body. This can cause
slower reflexes, confusion, and drowsiness. It can also reduce visual
perception and coordination and decrease the ability to learn. People
with cardiovascular disease, such as angina, are most at risk from
exposure to CO. These individuals may experience chest pain and
more cardiovascular symptoms if they are exposed to CO, particularly
while exercising. |
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| Hydrogen Sulfide
|
| Hydrogen
sulfide is a colorless, transparent gas with a characteristic rotten-egg
odor at low concentrations and no detectable odor at high concentrations.
Odors become detectable in concentrations as low as .008 parts per
million (ppm), according to studies conducted in California.
Hydrogen
sulfide is an extremely toxic and irritating gas. Free hydrogen
sulfide in the blood reduces its oxygen-carrying capacity, thereby
depressing the nervous system. Because hydrogen sulfide is oxidized
quite rapidly to sulfates in the body, however, acute exposure has
not been shown to produce permanent aftereffects, unless oxygen
deprivation of the nervous system is prolonged. Repeated exposures
to hydrogen sulfide also are not believed to result in accumulative
or systemic poisoning. Effects such as eye irritation, respiratory
tract irritation, slow pulse rate, lassitude, digestive disturbances,
and cold sweats may occur, but these symptoms typically disappear
in a relatively short time after removal from exposure.
For further
information on the health effects of low-level exposure to hydrogen
sulfide, read a Literature Review of
the Health Effects Associated with the Inhalation of Hydrogen Sulfide
(DEQ Publication, June 2001: pdf 49 kb, 15
pages). |
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| Indoor
Air Pollutants |
| Most
people are aware that outdoor air pollution can damage their health,
but knowledge of the health impacts of indoor air pollution is limited.
EPA studies of human exposure to air pollutants indicate that indoor
levels of pollutants may be 2 to 5 times higher, and occasionally
more than 100 times higher, than outdoor levels. These levels of
indoor air pollutants may be of particular concern because most
people spend about 90% of their time indoors. |
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Sources
of Indoor Air Pollutants |
| Many
sources of indoor air pollution can be found in any home, including:
- combustion sources
such as oil, gas, kerosene, coal, wood, and tobacco products;
- building materials
and furnishings as diverse as deteriorated, asbestos-containing
insulation, wet or damp carpet, and cabinetry or furniture made
of certain pressed wood products;
- products for household
cleaning and maintenance, personal care, or hobbies;
- central heating
and cooling systems and humidification devices;
and
- outdoor sources
such as radon, pesticides, and outdoor air pollution.
The
relative importance of any single source depends on how much of
a given pollutant it emits and how hazardous those emissions are.
In some cases, factors such as how old the source is and whether
it is properly maintained are signficant. For example, an impoperly
adjusted gas stove can emit significantly more carbon monoxide that
one that is properly adjusted. |
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Immediate
Effects of Exposure to Indoor Air Pollutants |
| Health
effects from indoor air pollutants may be experienced soon after
exposure or, possibly, years later. Immediate effects may show up
after a single exposure or repeated exposures. These include headaches,
dizziness, fatigue, and irritation of the eyes, nose, and throat.
Such immediate
effects are usually short-term and treatable. Sometimes the treatment
is simply eliminating the person's exposure to the source of the
pollution, if it can be identified. Symptoms of some diseases, including
asthma, hypersensitivity pneumonitis, and humidifier fever, may
also show up soon after exposure to some indoor air pollutants.
The likelihood of immediate reactions to indoor air pollutants depends
on several factors. Age and preexisting medical conditions are two
important influences. In other cases, whether a person reacts to
a pollutant depends on individual sensitivity, which varies tremendously
from person to person. Some people can become sensitized to biological
pollutants after repeated exposures, and it appears that some people
can become sensitized to chemical pollutants as well.
Certain immediate effects are similar to those from colds or other
viral diseases, so it is often difficult to determine if the symptoms
are a result of exposure to indoor air pollution. For this reason,
it is important to pay attention to the time and place symptoms
occur. If the symptoms fade or go away when a person is away from
home, for example, an effort should be made to identify indoor air
pollution sources that may be possible causes. Some effects may
be made worse by an inadequate supply of outdoor air or from the
heating, cooling, or humidity conditions prevalent in the home.
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Long-term
Effects of Exposure to Indoor Air Pollutants |
| Other
health effects from exposure to indoor air pollutants may show up
either years after exposure has occurred or only after long or repeated
periods of exposure. These effects, which include some respiratory
diseases, heart disease, and cancer, can be severely debilitating
or fatal.
It is
prudent to try to improve the indoor air quality in your home even
if symptoms are not noticeable. While pollutants commonly found
in indoor air are responsible for many harmful effects, it is uncertain
what concentrations or periods of exposure are necessary to produce
specific health problems. People also react very differently to
exposure to indoor air pollutants. Further research is needed to
better understand which health effects occur after exposure to the
average pollutant concentrations found in homes and which occur
after exposure to higher concentrations for short periods of time.
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For
More Information |
| In
Idaho, the Bureau of Environmental Health and Safety of the Department
of Health and Welfare is responsible for informing and educating
citizens about human health risks associated with exposure to indoor
contaminants and ways to prevent or reduce exposure. Visit the Bureau's
Web site for information on the agency's indoor environment
program and to access various fact sheets on indoor air pollution
and assistance. Indoor air quality for businesses and industry is
regulated by the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration (OSHA).
EPA also
maintains a Web site
on Indoor Air Quality with information on sources of indoor
air pollution, their associated health effects and ways to reduce
exposure. |
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| Lead
|
| Lead
is a metal found naturally in the environment as well as in manufactured
products. It is one of six "criteria pollutants"
for which EPA has established protective standards. Historically,
the major sources of lead emissions were motor vehicles (such as
cars and trucks) and industrial sources. Due to the phase-out of
leaded gasoline, however, airborne lead is no longer a problem in
most of the U.S. The major source of lead emissions today is metals
processing and the highest levels of lead in air are generally found
near lead smelters, waste incinerators, utilities, and lead-acid
battery manufacturers.
Exposure
to lead can occur through multiple pathways, including inhalation
of air and ingestion of lead in food, water, soil, or dust. Excessive
lead exposure can cause seizures, brain and kidney damage, mental
retardation and/or behavioral disorders. Children six and under
are most at risk because their bodies are growing quickly. Research
suggests that the primary sources of lead exposure for most children
are deteriorating lead-based paint, lead-contaminated dust, and
lead-contaminated residential soil. |
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For
More Information |
| Lead
in Paint, Dust, and Soil (EPA Web Page)
Information on all aspects of the federal lead poisoning prevention
program, with a special focus on the efforts within EPA's Office
of Pollution Prevention and Toxics. |
Protect
Your Family From Lead in Your Home (EPA
pdf Publication)
This publication, issued jointly by EPA and the U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission, provides information on detecting possible lead
hazards in the home, what to do if hazards are found, effects of
lead in the body, and advice on how to significantly reduce lead
hazards. |
Lead
- How Lead Affects the Way We Live and Breathe
(EPA Web Page)
Today, metal processing plants are generally responsible for most
of the lead in the air. |
Lead
and Compounds (EPA Web Page)
Lead is a very toxic element, causing a variety of effects at low-dose
levels. |
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| Mercury
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| Mercury
is a naturally occurring element present throughout the environment.
When released into the air as a result of human activity, it can
become an air toxic. Mercury concentrations in air are usually low,
however, and of little direct concern. In the U.S., coal-fired power
plants are the primary source of mercury emissions to the air.
Human
activity can release mercury into the water and soil as well. When
mercury enters water, biological processes transform it to a highly
toxic form that builds up in fish and animals that eat fish. People
are exposed to mercury primarily by eating fish. Link to more information
about Mercury
in the Environment.
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| Nitrogen Dioxide
|
| Nitrogen
dioxide is a brownish, highly reactive gas present in all urban
atmospheres. Nitrogen dioxide is a "criteria
pollutant" that can irritate the lungs, cause bronchitis and
pneumonia, and lower resistance to respiratory infections. Nitrogen
oxides contribute to formation of both ozone
and acid rain and may affect both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.
The major mechanism for the formation of nitrogen dioxide in the
atmosphere is the oxidation of the primary air pollutant nitric
oxide. Nitrogen oxide forms when fuel is burned at high temperatures.
The two
major emission sources of nitrogen oxides are automobiles and stationary
fuel combustion sources such as electric utility and industrial
boilers.
Health
effects of exposure to nitrogen dioxide include:
- In children and adults with respiratory disease
such as asthma, nitrogen dioxide can cause coughing, wheezing,
and shortness of breath. Even short exposures to nitrogen dioxide
can affect lung function.
- In children, short-term exposure can increase
the risk of respiratory illness.
- Animal studies suggest that long-term exposure
to nitrogen dioxide may increase susceptibility to respiratory
infection and may cause permanent structural changes in the lungs.
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For
More Information |
NOx:
How Nitrogen Oxides Affect the Way We Live and Breathe (EPA
Web Page)
Information
on how nitrogen oxides are formed, health and environmental impacts,
and efforts to reduce NOx. |
Clean
Air Market Programs: NOx Trading Programs (EPA
Web Page)
All NOx trading programs have the same goal:
reduce the transport of ground-level ozone across large distances.
|
Nitrogen
Oxides (NOx) Reduction under the Acid Rain Program (EPA
Web Page)
EPA's Acid Rain program focuses on one set of sources that emit NOx:
coal-fired electric utility boilers. |
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| Ozone
|
| Ozone
is a gas that forms in the atmosphere when three atoms of oxygen
are combined. It is not emitted directly into the air, but is created
at ground level by a chemical reaction between oxides of nitrogen,
and volatile organic compounds in the presence of sunlight. Ozone
has the same chemical structure whether it occurs high above the
earth or at ground level and can be "good" or "bad," depending on
its location in the atmosphere.
Ozone
occurs in two layers of the atmosphere. The layer surrounding the
earth's surface is the troposphere. Here, ground-level or "bad"
ozone is an air pollutant that damages human health, vegetation,
and many common materials. It is a key ingredient of urban smog.
The troposphere extends to a level about 10 miles up, where it meets
the second layer, the stratosphere. The stratospheric, or "good"
ozone layer, extends upward from about 10 to 30 miles and protects
life on earth from the sun's harmful ultraviolet rays.
The reactivity
of ozone causes health problems because it damages lung tissue,
reduces lung function, and sensitizes the lungs to other irritants.
Scientific evidence indicates that ambient levels of ozone not only
affect people with impaired respiratory systems, such as asthmatics,
but healthy adults and children as well. Exposure to ozone for several
hours at relatively low concentrations has been found to significantly
reduce lung function and induce respiratory inflammation in normal,
healthy people during exercise. This decrease in lung function generally
is accompanied by symptoms including chest pain, coughing, sneezing,
and pulmonary congestion.
Recent
health studies have shown ozone to be even more detrimental to health
than previously thought. The EPA has issued new, more stringent
standards for this "criteria pollutant"
based on these studies. |
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For
More Information |
Ground Level Ozone: Protecting Your Health and Air Quality
(DEQ Brochure, June 2008: 375 kb, 2 pages) |
| Ozone:
Good Up High, Bad Nearby (EPA Web Page)
Ozone is a gas that forms in the atmosphere when three atoms of
oxygen are combined. |
How
Ground-Level Ozone Affects the Way We Live and Breathe (EPA
Web Page)
Ground-level ozone is an air pollutant that causes human health problems
and damages crops and other vegetation. |
Smog:
Who Does It Hurt?: What You Need To Know About Ozone and Your Health
(EPA Web Page)
On a hot,
smoggy summer day, have you ever wondered: Is the air safe to breathe?
Should I be concerned about going outside? |
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| Particulate Matter
|
| Particulate
matter, or PM, is the term for small particles found in the air
including dust, dirt, soot, smoke, and liquid droplets. Particles
can be suspended in the air for long periods of time. Some particles
are large or dark enough to be seen as soot or smoke. Others are
so small that individually they can only be detected with an electron
microscope. Some particles are directly emitted into the air while
others are formed in the air through chemical reactions. Sources
of PM include cars, trucks, buses, factories, construction sites,
tilled fields, unpaved roads, construction, wood burning, agricultural
burning, wildfires, prescribed fires, and natural windblown dust.
Particulate
matter is a "criteria pollutant" that comes
in a wide range of sizes. Particles less than 10 micrometers in
diameter tend to pose the greatest health concern because they can
be inhaled into and accumulate in the respiratory system. Particles
less than 2.5 micrometers in diameter are referred to as "fine"
particles. Sources of fine particles include all types of combustion
(motor vehicles, power plants, wood burning, etc.) and some industrial
processes. Particles with diameters between 2.5 and 10 micrometers
are referred to as "coarse."
Sources of coarse particles include crushing or grinding operations
and dust from paved or unpaved roads.
Both fine
and coarse particles can accumulate in the respiratory system and
are associated with numerous health effects. Coarse particles can
aggravate respiratory conditions such as asthma. Exposure to fine
particles is associated with several serious health effects, including
premature death. Adverse health effects have been associated with
exposures to PM over both short periods (such as a day) and longer
periods (a year or more).
- When exposed to PM, people with existing heart
or lung diseases-such as asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease, congestive heart disease, or ischemic heart disease-are
at increased risk of premature death or admission to hospitals
or emergency rooms.
- Older persons are especially sensitive to PM
exposure. They are at increased risk of admission to hospitals
or emergency rooms and premature death from heart or lung diseases.
- When exposed to PM, children and people with
existing lung disease may not be able to breathe as deeply or
vigorously as they normally would, and they may experience symptoms
such as coughing and shortness of breath.
- PM can increase susceptibility to respiratory
infections and can aggravate existing respiratory diseases, such
as asthma and chronic bronchitis, causing more use of medication
and more doctor visits.
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For
More Information |
| PM
- How Particulate Matter Affects the Way We Live and Breathe
(EPA Web Page)
More than 20 million people live in areas with PM concentrations
that were above the national standard in 1999. |
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| Sulfur Dioxide
|
| Sulfur
dioxide is a colorless, reactive gas produced during burning of
sulfur-containing fuels such as coal and oil, during metal smelting,
and by other industrial processes. Sulfur dioxide emitted to the
atmosphere results largely from stationary sources such as coal
and oil combustion, steel mills, refineries, pulp and paper mills,
and nonferrous smelters. Generally, the highest concentrations of
this "criteria pollutant" are found near
large industrial sources, such as power plants and industrial boilers.
High concentrations
of sulfur dioxide affect breathing and may aggravate existing respiratory
and cardiovascular disease. Sensitive populations include asthmatics,
individuals with bronchitis or emphysema, children, and the elderly.
Sulfur dioxide is also a primary contributor to acid rain, which
causes acidification of lakes and streams and can damage trees,
crops, buildings, and statues. In addition, sulfur compounds in
the air contribute to visibility impairment in large parts of the
country. This is especially noticeable in national parks. |
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For
More Information |
| SO2
- How Sulfur Dioxide Affects the Way We Live and Breathe (EPA
Web Page) |
EPA
Acid Rain Program (EPA Web Page)
The overall goal of EPA's Acid Rain Program is to achieve significant
environmental and public health benefits through reductions in emissions
of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides, the primary causes of acid
rain. |
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| Criteria Pollutants
|
| EPA
has established standards for six air pollutants known as "criteria
pollutants" to protect the health and welfare of people, plants,
and animals, as well as to prevent damage to buildings, monuments,
water resources, and natural areas. Standards for criteria pollutants
are based on current scientific data and studies, and are designed
to protect the most sensitive populations. Those most likely to
be affected by air pollution include the elderly, children, and
people with existing respiratory problems. It also includes active,
healthy adults who work or exercise outdoors. The standards are
revised every five years to reflect new studies and scientific data
on health impacts. |
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