Air pollution is linked to the daily deaths of over 100 children under five in East Asia and the Pacific, according to a ...
SINGAPORE – More than 100 children under the age of five die each day in East Asia and the Pacific from air pollution-related causes, said Unicef on Feb 6, in a call for urgent action to cut ...
“Air pollution is affecting children in places that are meant to be safe for them – it’s affecting children in their homes, it’s affecting children in their school. In fact, more than half ...
Naming it a “silent killer”, the UN body said over 100 daily deaths of children under five are linked to air pollution in East Asia and the Pacific. In a statement released today, February 6, the ...
People's ability to interpret emotions or focus on performing a task is reduced by short-term exposure to particulate matter ...
Air pollution kills 100 children younger than age five every day in East Asia and the Pacific, The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said in a new report on Thursday. Air pollution, the “silent ...
(Bloomberg) -- Air pollution is linked to the daily deaths of over 100 children under five in East Asia and the Pacific, according to a United Nations agency, as several countries in the region are ...
Image: People wearing face masks because of poor air pollution in the Thai capital. Pic: Reuters/Athit Perawongmetha For weeks, I've had to rush my children into school with masks on, as the ...
SINGAPORE (The Straits Times/ANN): More than 100 children under the age of five die each day in East Asia and the Pacific from air pollution-related causes, said Unicef on Feb 6, in a call for ...
Yes, air pollution can cause skin breakouts ... People would be outside running. Babies and small children exposed from birth. No one wore a mask which can significantly decrease exposure.
The five senses are incapable of perceiving reality — which is to say, air pollution and the effects of climate change.
Toxic air is linked to the deaths of more than 100 children every day in east Asia and the Pacific, causing “unimaginable ...