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EPA Awards $40 Million in Grants to Study Health Effects of Particulate Matter
Thursday, November 17, 2005

EPA has awarded $40 million to establish five, cutting-edge research centers. These centers will further improve our understanding of how particulate matter or PM affects human health and the types and sources of PM most responsible for these effects. The grants were awarded to Johns Hopkins University, Harvard University, the University of Rochester, the University of California at Davis, and the University of California at Los Angeles to study high-priority issues related to the effects of airborne particles on human health.

While the United States has made noticeable progress over the last four decades in reducing air pollution, substantial concern still remains about the health effects of ambient particulate matter, a major component of the air pollution mix in many areas of the country. Several studies show associations between PM and premature death from cardiopulmonary causes. PM has also been linked to hospitalization for respiratory or cardiovascular diseases and exacerbation of respiratory diseases or decreases in lung function or lung growth. The five research centers will focus on human susceptibility, mechanisms of health effects, exposure-response relationships, and the cross-cutting issue of linking health effects with particulate matter sources and components.

Particulates come from a variety of sources including coal-burning power plants, factories, construction sites, cars, trucks, buses, tilled fields, unpaved roads, stone crushing, and the burning of wood. Other particles may be formed in the air when gases emitted from burning fuels react with sunlight and water vapor.

The grants announced today are funded through the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Science to Achieve Results (STAR) competitive grants program. For more information about these grants, visit: (will fill in). For more information on EPA’s STAR program, see: http://www.epa.gov/ncer/ . Information on EPA’s Clean Air Rules is at: http://www.epa.gov/cleanair2004 .

Grant awards were made to:

The Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University , Baltimore, Md. – The Center will map health risks of PM across the US based on analyses of national databases on air pollution, mortality, and hospitalization, and then use the maps to guide detailed monitoring and collection of PM samples for physical, chemical, and biological characterization in assays relevant to pulmonary and cardiovascular outcomes. [more information on this center]

Harvard University , Boston, Mass. – The fundamental objective of this Center is to understand how specific PM characteristics and sources impact inflammation, autonomic responses, and vascular dysfunction. [more information on this center]

University of California, Los Angeles , Calif. -- Center researchers will investigate the underlying mechanisms that produce the health effects associated with exposure to particulate matter, and attempt to understand how toxic mechanisms and resulting health effects vary with the source, chemical composition and physical characteristics of particulate matter. [more information on this center]

University of California, Davis , Calif. – Researchers will investigate the properties of particles that are responsible for human health effects, the metabolism that underlies these effects, and the consequences of chronic exposures, especially during childhood, that make individuals more susceptible to adverse effects. [more information on this center]

University of Rochester , Rochester, N.Y. – Researchers will investigate the mechanisms by which fine and ultrafine particles from specific sources cause adverse cardiovascular effects, particularly in susceptible groups such as diabetics and those with cardiovascular disease. [more information on this center]

EPA relies on quality science as the basis for sound policy and decision-making. EPA’s laboratories, research centers, and grantees are building the scientific foundation needed to support the Agency’s mission to safeguard human health and the environment.

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