May 29, 2014

NEWS RELEASE: Research raises new concerns about air pollution impacts at Los Angeles International Airport

Study shows air quality from ultrafine particles extends further than demonstrated by previous research


PRESS: Los Angeles Times , Daily Breeze, For more news coverage, click over to our summary on Storify.

    LOS ANGELES — For the first time, research conducted by scientists at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California (USC) shows that airliner activity at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) worsens air quality over a far larger area than previously assumed.

    The study, published May 29, 2014, in the journal Environmental Science and Technology (ES&T) and conducted with University of Washington (UW) researchers, found a doubling of ultrafine particle number concentrations extended east more than 10 miles downwind from the airport boundary over a 20-square mile area, encompassing communities including Lennox, Westmont, parts of South L.A., Hawthorne and Inglewood, and, in certain wind conditions, areas south of LAX.
     
    “Our research shows that airport impacts extend more than 5 times further than previously assumed,” said Scott Fruin, D. Env., lead researcher and assistant  professor of preventive medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC.  “Effects from planes that are landing appear to play a major role in this large area of impact.”


    To put this large area of impact into perspective, the researchers calculated that one-quarter to one-half of the entire L.A. County freeway system produces an equivalent increase in ultrafine particle numbers on a concentration-weighted basis.

    Graphic depicting ultrafine particle increase downwind of LAX relative to urban background air quality

    “LAX may be as important to L.A.’s air quality as the freeway system,” said Fruin. “The impact area is large, and the airport is busy most hours of the day. That makes it uniquely hard for people to avoid the effects of air pollution in affected areas.”

    Most previous research on the air quality impacts of airports focused on measuring air quality near where jet takeoffs occur. Takeoffs produce immense plumes of exhaust but only intermittently, and pollution concentrations downwind have been observed to fall off rapidly with distance. The assumption has been that total airport impacts also fall off rapidly with distance. The new research finds that this assumption is wrong.

    The study found that concentrations of ultrafine particles were more than double over 20 square miles compared to background concentrations in nearby areas outside the area of LAX impact. Also, ultrafine particle number concentrations four times higher than background extended a distance of six miles.

    “Given the existing concern about the possible health effects of urban ultrafine particle levels, living in an area with two to four times the average L.A. levels of ultrafine particles is of high public health concern,” said first author Neelakshi Hudda, Ph.D., research associate in preventive medicine at the Keck School.

    Ultrafine particles are currently unregulated, but are of concern because they appear to be more toxic than larger particles on an equal mass basis in animal and cellular studies, and because they appear able to enter the bloodstream, unlike large particles that lodge in the lungs.

    The research team used vehicles equipped with special measurement devices to capture data not available using traditional fixed monitors. The team was able to take moving measurements for more than 5 hours under consistent wind conditions to fully capture the extent of the impact boundaries.
     
    “Other airports generally have less steady wind directions, which would make these measurements more difficult,” said Hudda. “Similar impacts are probably happening, but their location likely shifts more rapidly than in Los Angeles.”

    “The on-shore westerly winds cause this impact regularly in communities east of LAX, because the impact’s location corresponds to the wind direction,” Hudda added. “In the winter months, when the winds were different, impacts were measured south of the airport during northerly winds.”

    The research was funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.

    UW researchers included Tim Larson, Ph.D. and Tim Gould, Ph.D. in the Department of Civil Engineering, and Kris Hartin, Ph.D. in the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences.


    ###

    Hudda, N., Gould, T., Hartin, K. Larson, T.V., and Fruin, S. A. (2014). Environmental Science and Technology, Published online May 29, 2014; dx.doi.org/10.1021/es5001566

    ABOUT KECK MEDICINE OF USC
    Keck Medicine of USC is the University of Southern California's medical enterprise, one of only two university-owned academic medical centers in the Los Angeles area. Encompassing academic, research and clinical entities, it consists of the Keck School of Medicine of USC, the region’s first medical school; the renowned USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, one of the first comprehensive cancer centers established in the United States; the USC Care Medical Group, the medical faculty practice; the Keck Medical Center of USC, which includes two acute care hospitals: 401-licensed bed Keck Hospital of USC and 60-licensed bed USC Norris Cancer Hospital; and USC Verdugo Hills Hospital, a 158-licensed bed community hospital. It also includes outpatient facilities in Beverly Hills, downtown Los Angeles, La CaƱada Flintridge, Pasadena, and the USC University Park Campus. USC faculty physicians and Keck School of Medicine departments also have practices throughout Los Angeles and Orange counties. The Keck Medicine of USC world-class medical facilities are staffed by nearly 600 physicians who are faculty at the renowned Keck School of Medicine of USC and part of USC Care Medical Group. They are not only clinicians, but cutting-edge researchers, leading professors and active contributors to national and international professional medical societies and associations. For more information, go to www.keckmedicine.org/beyond


    NEWS  RELEASE CONTACT INFORMATION:

    Contact: Leslie Ridgeway at (323) 442-2823 or lridgewa@usc.edu
    For a copy of the study, contact Environmental Science and Technology at (phone or email)

    USC Health Sciences Public Relations & Marketing
    1975 Zonal Avenue, KAM 400, Los Angeles, California 90033
    Tel 323.442.2830
    Fax 323.442.2832
    http://www.usc.edu/hsc/info/pr

    May 27, 2014

    Environmental Justice Summer Institute: Youth Workshops

    Four Southern California groups are excited to announce a new partnership to jointly sponsor an inaugural Environmental Justice Summer Institute (EJSI):
    • USC Environmental Health,
    • Asian and Pacific Islander Obesity Prevention Alliance (APIOPA),
    • From Lot to Spot (FLTS),
    • Social Justice Learning Institute (SJLI).
    This five week, 14-session summer program will begin on June 26, 2014. ESJI was created to engage a diverse group of 15 local high school youth from Lennox, Hawthorne and Inglewood, around environmental health and environmental justice issues.

    This EJSI curriculum is focused on educating, engaging, and empowering the youth to be agents of change in their own neighborhoods.
    Educate: Youth will learn about environmental justice and its disproportionate impact on people of color communities through workshops, presentations, and community tours.
    Engage: Youth will participate in an interactive workshop with urban planner James Rojas and conduct on-the-ground monitoring and mapping.  With partner USC the youth will develop hands-on experience to not only map out and identify highly polluted locations in their own neighborhoods, but to also have an opportunity to use air and noise monitoring equipment to track pollution levels.
    Empower: Throughout the program, the youth will work with Digital Rain Factory on digital storytelling to educate and engage their communities around the environmental concerns they have. The digital stories they create will also be used to advocate to their local elected officials, for changes they identify are needed through their summer program.

    Curriculum to be covered:
    • Researching environmental justice in our community
    • Becoming environmental justice youth leaders
    • Learning how to make videos for a cause
    • Monitoring air and noise levels
    • Informing public policy 101: The low down on our local policies
    • Being a dynamic speaker
    • Engaging the Community

    Stay tuned for more exciting details of this pilot program! Search #EJSIFellows on Twitter to keep up on the latest developments, photos and more.

    Learn more about the institute in these blog posts and Resource Page:
    Environmental Justice Summer Institute: Youth Workshops
    Youth Pollution Monitoring Activities across the Southland
    Teaching Environmental Justice through Building Model Cities

    The EJSI is partially supported by USC’s Children’s Environmental Health Center, which is funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences  and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Additional support for staff participation is provided by grants from the Kresge Foundation and the California Wellness Foundation. 

    Environmental Justice Summer Institute partner organizations on Twitter:
    @USC_EH_Outreach
    @fightAPIobesity
    @SJLI_CA
    @fromlottospot

    May 19, 2014

    April & May: USC EH News Highlights

    This post looks back over the past couple of months and highlights members of our Centers who have been featured or quoted in the news...


    May 9, 2014

    Establishing a GEOHealth Hub for East Africa

    L-R: Ratnam, Howland and Tefera on the roof of USC's Soto Street Building as they disassemble an air pollution monitor.
    Worku Tefera is a researcher visiting USC Environmental Health this week to learn about the types of air pollution monitoring conducted as part of the Children’s Health Study. The training will kick-start a similar air pollution monitoring network that will be set up in Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia. “Pollution is boundary-less," said Tefera, who is also studying for a PhD at USC under the direction of Dr. Frank Gilliland.

    Training is being provided by USC staff Suresh Ratnam and Steve Howland and faculty members Kiros Berhane, Frank Gilliland and Scott Fruin. “It’s been a busy week” training Worku and documenting all the equipment procedures, says Ratnam. 

    Tefera will be bringing exposure monitoring equipment back to Ethiopia with him to begin a study, as part of the Global Environmental Health initiative of the SCEHSC and part of the global health activities of the Institute for Global Health.

    Tefera is co-investigator of a planning grant from the National Institutes of Health’s Fogarty International Center designed to establish a “GEOHealth Hub for East Africa." GEOHealth stands for "Global Environmental and Occupational Health," with the Hub covering Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda. He is also a co-investigator on a proposal with Environmental Health faculty on "Effects of Clean Cookstoves on Child Survival in Ethiopia."

    by Kiros Berhane and Carla Truax