Air Pollution In Detroit Motor City

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Having spent my childhood between Fort Wayne, Indiana and Detroit, Michigan, I would often question my father about the "cloud" over the city and the smell of rotten eggs in the city of Detroit. Albeit I was often told it was my “active imagination", I was always curious as to why the sky was in such a "dark state” even on a sunny day. Why doesn’t it appear this way when I’m in Indiana? Was this "black state" considered fresh air for Detroiters? Is it harmful in any way? What can we do to help or change it? Known as the world’s automotive center and by its famous nickname, The Motor City serves as home to the three largest auto industries in the country, Chrysler, Ford and General Motors. In Detroit and surrounding areas, pollution comes from a wide range of industries including …show more content…

They also include heart disease, stroke, and cancer — diseases that are also more common in Detroit than elsewhere. (Richards) A study performed by the state’s Department of Community Health shows in the zip codes in 48217 and around it have “significantly higher” rates of newly diagnosed cases of lung and bronchus cancers than the rest of Michigan. (ThinkProgress) Another study performed in 2005 by researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center on air quality in nine cities including Detroit, discovered the risk of hospitalization for ischemic stroke is 1 percent greater on days where air pollution are high compared to days of low levels of air pollution. The study revealed that air pollution triggers heart attacks and worsen the conditions of individuals with congestive heart failure. (https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/10/051028142356.htm) Wayne State University’s research department has discovered that exposure to PM2.5 an airborne particle from air pollution has a direct adverse effect on the liver and causes liver fibrosis, an illness associated with liver cancer. (Wayne State

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