​Kids growing up in cities suffer from more respiratory infections, finds study​

​City life increases risk of respiratory infections​
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​City life increases risk of respiratory infections​

Two studies presented at the European Respiratory Society International Congress in Milan, Italy talk about the effect of city life on the immune system of kids. Young children growing up in towns and cities suffer from more respiratory infections than those who grow up in the countryside, as per one study. The second study found that attending day care, living in a damp home or near dense traffic increase the risk of chest infections in young children, while breastfeeding reduces the risk.
​"Children living in urban areas had an average of 17 respiratory infections"​
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​"Children living in urban areas had an average of 17 respiratory infections"​


The researchers found that children living in urban areas had an average of 17 respiratory infections, such as coughs and colds, before the age of three compared to an average of 15 infections in children living in rural areas. The researchers analysed the immune systems of the kids when they were four weeks old. For this study, a total of 663 children and their mothers were involved from pregnancy until the children were three years old.

​"Urban living is an independent risk factor for developing infections in early life"​
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​"Urban living is an independent risk factor for developing infections in early life"​


“Our findings suggest that urban living is an independent risk factor for developing infections in early life when taking account of several related factors such as exposure to air pollution and starting day care. Interestingly, changes in the blood of pregnant mothers and newborn babies, as well as changes in the new-born immune system, seem to partly explain this relationship," said Dr Nicklas Brustad, a researcher and physician on the Copenhagen Prospective Studies on Asthma in Childhood (COPSAC) based at Gentofte Hospital and the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

​"Breastfeeding for longer than six months helped protect babies and children from infections"​
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​"Breastfeeding for longer than six months helped protect babies and children from infections"​


The second study presented by Dr Tom Ruffles from Brighton and Sussex Medical School and University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust, Brighton, UK found that breastfeeding for longer than six months helped protect babies and children from infections, while attending day care increased the risk. The study includes data of 1344 mothers and their children living in Scotland and England. The mothers were asked to fill questionnaires with questions on chest infections, symptoms such as coughing and wheezing, respiratory medication, and exposure to potential environmental risk factors.

​The study establishes the benefits of breastfeeding​
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​The study establishes the benefits of breastfeeding​



Analysis of the questionnaire revealed that young children living in homes with visible damp were twice as likely to need treatment with an inhaler to relieve respiratory symptoms and twice as likely to need treatment with a steroid inhaler. Living in an area with dense traffic increased the risk of chest infections, and exposure to tobacco smoke increased the risk of coughing and wheezing. “This research provides some important evidence about how we can help reduce chest infections in babies and toddlers. The benefits of breastfeeding are well-established, and we should continue to support mothers who want to breastfeed their babies. We should also be making every effort to reduce exposure to infections in day care, keep homes free of damp and mould, reduce tobacco smoking and cut air pollution," said Dr. Ruffles.


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