cover image: Marine Microplastics and Infant Health

Marine Microplastics and Infant Health

25 Oct 2024

A century of plastic usage has led to an accumulation of plastic waste in waterways and oceans. Over time, these wastes break down into particles smaller than 5 microns – or “microplastics” – which can infiltrate human biological systems. Despite decades of research into this emerging source of pollution, there is a paucity of direct evidence on the health impacts of microplastics exposure at a population scale. This paper reports the first empirical link between in-utero microplastic exposure and adverse birth outcomes. Our analysis is based on a dataset of 3 million births that occurred in coastal areas of 15 countries spanning four continents, which we merge with novel remote-sensing measurements of marine microplastic concentrations. We show that in-utero exposure to microplastics, particularly during the second and third trimesters, leads to a significant increase in the likelihood of low birth weight. A doubling of exposure increases low birth weight hazard by 0.37 per 1,000 births, which implies that over 205,000 cases per year globally can be attributed to microplastic exposure. We further show that aerosolization – whereby microplastic particles become airborne and inhalable due to seawater evaporation – is an important pathway for health impact, a challenge likely to escalate as ocean temperatures rise.
health renewable resources development economics health, education, and welfare development and growth environment and energy economics environmental and resource economics economics of health

Authors

Xinming Du, Shan Zhang, Eric Zou

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Acknowledgements & Disclosure
We thank Douglas Almond, Maureen Cropper, Tatyana Deryugina, Hannah Druckenmiller, Gabriel Englander, Julian Reif, Chris Ruf, Wolfram Schlenker, Jeff Shrader, Andreas Thurnherr, and participants at various conferences and seminars for helpful comments. Raphaël Pérot provided excellent research assistance. All errors are our own. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3386/w33094
Pages
47
Published in
United States of America

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