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Breathing wildfire smoke during pregnancy raises risk of premature birth, study finds
A firefighting helicopter flies past smoke plumes after making a water drop near Susanville. The findings come as fires continue to scorch California. Photograph: Patrick T Fallon/AFP/Getty Images
Stanford University research estimates that smoky California air may have resulted in as many as 7,000 preterm births
First published on Tue 24 Aug 2021 22.02 BST
As California wildfires continue to rage and the Lake Tahoe area faces some of the highest air pollution levels in the world, a new study has found that breathing wildfire smoke during pregnancy increases the risk of premature birth.
The study from Stanford University, published in Environmental Research this month, estimates that the effects of wildfire smoke may have resulted in as many as 7,000 extra preterm births in California between 2007 and 2012.
Researchers combined more than 3m birth records with satellite and ground data on wildfire smoke exposures for each zip code in California. They found that the more days a mother was exposed to wildfire smoke during pregnancy, the more likely she was to face a preterm birth. The effects of moderate to severe exposure levels were significantly worse.
“We found that a week’s worth of smoke exposure (at these levels) was associated with a 5% increased risk and a month’s worth was associated with a 20% increase in preterm births,” said Sam Heft-Neal, the lead author on the study.
California’s wildfire smoke could be more harmful than vehicle emissions, study says
The findings compound growing evidence that smoke and the tiny particles of air pollution it produces, known as PM2.5, have dire health effects on the human body, ranging from heart attacks, strokes and asthma to mental illness.
“This stuff is tiny and it gets into the body, causes inflammation and creates a cascade of health effects,” said study co-author Marshall Burke, who is deputy director of the Center on Food Security and the Environment.
The findings come as fires continue to scorch California, with blazes such as the massive Dixie fire in the north of the state having already burned through 1.5m acres of drought-parched land. This week visitors to the Lake Tahoe region have seen air quality monitor readings shoot up into the hazardous 600 index range, far worse than current readings in some of the world’s most polluted cities, including Delhi, India, and Jakarta, Indonesia.
The school district in the Reno, Nevada, area closed all public schools serving 67,000 students in Reno, Sparks and Incline Village on Monday because of the air pollution, according to the Associated Press. Residents were urged to remain indoors as much as possible.
The Stanford study attributed 2,000 preterm births to smoke in the state in 2008, the worst year of the study period. But, sadly, the authors said, wildfire smoke levels have gotten far worse since the end of the study period in 2012.
“The smoke exposure then was dramatically less back then,” said Burke. “Four of the last five years have seen worse smoke than any year in our sample.”
During California’s historic 2020 fire season, more than 4m acres burned and half of the state’s population experienced a month of unhealthy levels of wildfire smoke, according to a Stanford release on the study.
The study found that pregnant women in wealthy neighborhoods were just as likely to suffer the effects of the smoke as those in low income areas.
Heft-Neal said the findings indicate that pregnant women should take extra measures to protect themselves from wildfire smoke, such as staying indoors and using air filtration systems and high quality masks.
Burke added that the societal costs of air pollution from wildfire smoke justify further steps from the state and federal government to prevent massive wildfires. He said each premature birth costs society an average of $70,000, so the benefits of reducing such early births alone could have “enormous societal benefits”.
Those benefits could go a long way toward paying for measures to reduce the fuel available for fires, like mechanically thinning forests and prescribed burns, he said.
“Our research highlights that reducing wildfire risk and the air pollution that accompanies it is one way of achieving these societal benefits,” he said..
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By Maria Chiorando For Mailonline 20:01 BST 24 Aug 2021 , updated 20:11 BST 24 Aug 2021
Fans of YouTuber Zoe Sugg went into a frenzy last night as they questioned whether she'd already given birth after her baby bump 'disappeared' in an Instagram video posted by her partner Alfie Deyes.
Zoe - known as Zoella - and Alfie, 27, who live together in a £1.7million four-storey mansion in Brighton, revealed back in March that they were expecting a baby girl.
The 31-year-old vlogger reached the 37-week milestone last weekend, and despite her being three-weeks shy of the typical 40-week pregnancy, fans believed Zoe had secretly given birth.
This is because an Instagram story shared by Alfie yesterday seemed to show the social media star with a flatter stomach. 
He was inundated with messages from his curious followers - but the couple quickly set the record straight with a second video, where Zoe stood up straight to showcase her baby bump.
Zoella sparks birth rumours before confirming she's still pregnant
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In the first video, Alfie and his friend Sean - the boyfriend of his sister Poppy Deyes - rushed into the house to tell Zoe and Poppy that they've successfully grown a courgette.
Zoe, who is sitting on the sofa wearing an oversized white t-shirt, looked like she had a flat stomach as she gushed over the large vegetable.
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Following this, fans quickly filled Alfie's DMs with questions on whether Zoe had secretly given birth recently. 
On his next Instagram story, Alfie asked Zoe to 'stand up a second'. He explained: 'Everyone in my DMs is asking if you're pregnant or whether you've had the baby.'
She stood up, and cupped her bump, revealing she was still pregnant. 'I'm still pregnant… It did look like I wasn't pregnant though,' she said in the video, laughing. 
Zoe, who revealed her relationship with Alfie to the public in 2013, shared news of the pregnancy on Instagram in March this year.
Posting a video, she captioned it: 'We're super excited to share with you, that our baby girl will be joining us in September.'  
Not long after announcing she was having the baby, the YouTuber showed off her 15-week tiny pregnant stomach.
She took to Instagram stories to say: 'Over 15 weeks now and still look like I just ate a meal! I promise I'm actually pregnant!! Haha.' 
Zoe then added: 'I feel like everyone else I see who is pregnant has a bigger bump than me at this point! I guess everyone's bodies are so different!
'Having said that, I just took a picture from a lower down angle and it does look more 'bumpy' from here haha.'  
The social media star, who has 9.2 million Instagram followers and around 11 million YouTube subscribers, has spoken about her desire to have a family multiple times in the past.
Discussing it in a past vlog, she said: 'We talk about children and our future with children because we're both very excited about that.' 
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