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Nature ; 581(7808):241, 2020.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2286353

ABSTRACT

African Americans who earn US$50,000-60,000 annually - solidly middle class - are exposed to much higher levels of industrial chemicals, air pollution and poisonous heavy metals, as well as pathogens, than are profoundly poor white people with annual incomes of $10,000. The main culprits include indifference and ignorance, inadequate testing of industrial chemicals, racism, housing discrimination, corporate greed and lax legislation from, in the United States, a weakened Environmental Protection Agency. Black and minority ethnic people are also more likely to live in 'deprived' areas that are closer to sources of industrial pollution - from leadtainted water in Flint, Michigan, to nerve gas, arsenic and polychlorinated biphenyls in Anniston, Alabama.

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