Friday, 2 May 2008

Can trees help cure Asthma?

No, they can't but a new study by the British Medical Journal has shown that trees can really have a positive effect on children's health!

Children who live on tree-lined streets have lower rates of asthma, suggesting that those leafy green areas may be as important to public health as they are to quality of life.

Researchers with the British Medical Journal published their findings in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health after conducting a study on rates of asthma among four and five year olds in New York.

With asthma rates climbing – up 50% nationwide between 1980 and 2000, with the greatest increase in urban areas – a solution as simple as tree planting would be a welcome. The benefit of trees was felt regardless of proximity to pollution sources, family income or population density.

Unfortunately, the study found no benefit to older children.

Trees shade buildings and sidewalks, helping to lower temperatures and keep energy costs down, and they absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, helping to limit the growth of greenhouse gases that fuel to global warming.

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