Maternal, neonatal and socio-economic factors associated with intellectual development among children from a coal mining region in Brazil.

Environ Geochem Health

Programa de Pós Graduação eôôm Ciências da Saúde, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande - FURG, Rua Visconde de Paranaguá 102 Centro, Rio Grande-RS, 96203-900, Brazil.

Published: August 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Coal exposure negatively impacts children's health and intellectual development, with a study conducted in Brazil exploring this issue among children living near coal mining activities.
  • The study involved 778 children and used questionnaires and Raven's Progressive Color Matrices for assessment, revealing no significant differences in intellectual development between directly affected (DI) and indirectly affected (II) municipalities.
  • Factors such as socioeconomic conditions, maternal age, education, and neonatal outcomes were more closely linked to children's intellectual development than living near coal mining, indicating that these aspects may be more crucial than environmental pollution alone.

Article Abstract

Coal is the most aggressive energy sources in the environment. Several adverse outcomes on children's health exposure to coal pollutants have been reported. Pollutants from coal power plants adversely affect the intellectual development and capacity. The present study aimed to evaluate the intellectual development and associated factors among children living a city under the direct influence (DI) and six neighboring municipalities under the indirect influence (II) of coal mining activity in the largest coal reserve of Brazil. A structured questionnaire was completed by the child's guardian, and Raven's Progressive Color Matrices were administered to each child to assess intellectual development. A total of 778 children participated. In general, no significant difference was observed between the two cities. The DI city had better socioeconomic conditions than the II municipalities according to family income (< 0.001). The prevalence of children who were intellectually below average or with intellectual disabilities was 22.9%, and there was no significant difference (p > 0.05) between municipalities. In both unadjusted and adjusted analyses, intellectual development was associated with maternal age, marital situation and maternal education level, birth weight, breast feeding, frequent children's daycare, paternal participation in children's care and child growth. Living in the DI area was not associated with intellectual disability. The results suggest that socioeconomic conditions and maternal and neonatal outcomes are more important than environmental factors for intellectual development of children living in a coal mining area.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10653-021-00817-1DOI Listing

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