HEALTH & WELLNESS

Air pollution may be silently triggering premature births in Black communities across Atlanta.

By Aniket Chakraborty

June 6, 2025

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A new Emory University study tracked 330 pregnant African American women in high-traffic Atlanta areas.

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Women near intersecting highways showed higher PM2.5 exposure than those in suburban neighborhoods.

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Two molecules—cortexolone and lysoPE(20:3)—were found to mediate the link between air and early delivery.

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66 women gave birth preterm and 54 had early-term babies—far above the U.S. national average.

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These molecules disrupt protein digestion and cell function, crucial for fetal immune development.

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Researchers say the findings may explain how even “acceptable” pollution levels can harm pregnancies.

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Lead author Donghai Liang says understanding these pathways is key to developing interventions.

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Telling families to just “move out” isn’t a solution—systemic urban planning and clinical tools are needed.

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The study calls for urgent environmental justice in maternal care: pollution isn’t just dirty air—it’s deadly.

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