It might seem surprising, but even though outdoor air pollution has fallen a lot since the 1970s, asthma is more common today — especially in children. Here’s why:
🧼 1. Cleaner Isn’t Always Better for the Immune System
Modern lifestyles mean children are exposed to fewer germs early in life. This can cause the immune system to become over-sensitive, making allergies and asthma more likely. This is called the “hygiene hypothesis.”
👩⚕️ 2. Better Diagnosis
Asthma is diagnosed much more often now than in the past. In the 1970s, many children with wheezy breathing weren’t given a diagnosis. Today, doctors recognise and treat asthma early. That means the numbers look higher — but some of it is due to better awareness.
🏠 3. Indoor Pollution
While outdoor air has improved, indoor air can be a problem:
- Gas cookers, damp and mould
- Dust mites and cleaning sprays
- Less fresh air due to sealed homes These things can all affect breathing and trigger asthma.
🚗 4. Modern Air Pollution Still Affects Us
Pollution from traffic (especially nitrogen dioxide and tiny particles called PM2.5) is still a problem — especially near busy roads. These can irritate lungs and make asthma worse, even at low levels.
⚖️ 5. Lifestyle Factors
Obesity increases the risk of asthma, and more children are now overweight. Children also spend more time indoors and less time being active, which may affect lung health.
🧬 6. Genetics and Early Exposures
Family history matters, and things like antibiotics, pollution, or infections during pregnancy or early life can influence a child’s risk of developing asthma.
✅ Good News
Even though more people have asthma, it’s much better managed today:
- Inhalers are more effective
- Fewer people die from asthma
- Most children and adults with asthma can live full, active lives with the right support
🩺 Has Cleaning Our Air Been Worth It?
Despite the rise in asthma diagnoses, cleaning up the air has been a major public health success:
✔️ Major Benefits:
- Huge drop in bronchitis, pneumonia, and childhood chest infections
- Far fewer hospital admissions for acute respiratory illness
- Respiratory deaths due to coal smoke, sulphur dioxide, and black soot have plummeted
- Safer air for people with long-term lung conditions like COPD, ABPA, and CPA
🤔 Why Asthma Went Up Anyway:
As the section above explains, asthma is influenced by more than just air pollution:
- Indoor air, allergens, obesity, early-life exposures, and genetic factors all matter
- Better detection and survival also increase the number of people living with asthma
🔍 The Bigger Picture:
Even though asthma became more common, the severity of lung disease has dropped for many people thanks to:
- Better inhalers and treatments
- Early diagnosis
- Cleaner air and less exposure to smoke and harmful chemicals
So yes — cleaning the air has been worth it. It’s saved lives and made breathing easier for millions. But like most things in health, it’s one part of a much bigger story.
Let your healthcare team know if you have questions — understanding your environment and your own triggers can help you breathe easier, wherever you live.
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