Use of DDT linked to premature births
Heavy use of DDT in the US before 1966 may have produced a previously undetected epidemic of premature births, a new study shows. Scientists at the National Institute of Environmental Health
Related Content
- Household air pollution and chronic hypoxia in the placenta of pregnant Nigerian women: A randomized controlled ethanol Cookstove intervention
- Air Pollution Linked to 2.7M Premature Births Yearly, Study Contends
- Even a little air pollution may have long-term health effects on developing fetus
- U.S. preterm births tied to air pollution cost $4 billion a year
- Italy's 'triangle of death' linked to premature ageing
- Born loser