Ultrafine particles linked to 1,100 deaths per year in Montreal, Toronto: study
MONTREAL — A study by researchers at McGill University has found that a microscopic air pollutant generated from vehicles and industry plays a role in the deaths of an estimated 1,100 people in Canada’s two biggest cities each year.
Their study, published recently in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, finds that long-term exposure to the ultrafine particles known as UFPs — which are typically less than 100 nanometres in size — increases the risk of mortality.
Researchers tracked air pollution levels between 2001 and 2016 in Toronto and Montreal and used information including mortality data and other records to follow about 1.5 million people over time and calculate the connection between the exposure to UFPs and risk of death.
“We found that people, especially who are living in areas with higher levels of these particles, have a higher risk of mortality overall as well as mortality from respiratory and cardiovascular causes,” Scott Weichenthal, the study’s lead investigator, said in an interview on Wednesday.