Air Pollution During Pregnancy and Birth Outcomes in Italy
Palma AlessandroPetrunyk InnaVuri Daniela
CEIS Research Paper
We investigate the impact of fetal exposure to air pollution on health outcomes at
birth in Italy in the 2000s combining information on mother’s residential location from
birth certificates with information on PM10 concentrations from air quality monitors.
The potential endogeneity deriving from differential pollution exposure is addressed by
exploiting as-good-as-random variation in rainfall shocks as an instrumental variable
for air pollution concentrations. Our results show that both average levels of PM10
and days above the hazard limit have detrimental effects on birth weight, duration of
gestation as well as overall health status at birth. These effects are mainly driven by
pollution exposure during the third trimester of pregnancy and further differ in size with
respect to the maternal socio-economic status, suggesting that babies born to socially
disadvantaged mothers are more vulnerable. Given the non negligible effects of pollution
on birth outcomes, further policy efforts are needed to fully protect fetuses from the
adverse effects of air pollution and to mitigate the environmental inequality of health at
birth.
Number: 464
Keywords: pollution, particulate matter, birth weight, pre-term birth, environmental policies
JEL codes: I18, J13, Q53, Q58
Volume: 17
Issue: 6
Date: Friday, July 12, 2019
Revision Date: Tuesday, September 3, 2019