European Journalists April Issue | Page 10

Smog in the UK By Bethonie Waring Smog caused havoc across the country, with hundreds of people claiming sore throats, inflamed eyes and other health problems, as the ‘perfect storm’ rolled into the UK, but all the politicians seemed to care about was whose fault it was that David Cameron couldn’t go for a run. Maybe Amazon’s claim that it had seen a 15% rise in its sale of face masks suggests that people were going a bit extreme over the increase in air pollution at the end of last week, but the fact that Asthma UK reported that more than 80% of asthma sufferers used their inhalers more than usual whilst the smog took over shows that something was defiantly wrong. Some schools chose to keep asthma sufferers indoors whilst the air pollution levels were at level 9 in some places (officially “very high” according to Defra), and some schools chose to keep everyone indoors to reduce the risk of children having breathing problems. Advice maybe didn’t make decisions any easier, with conflicting public health information coming from the government. A helpline encouraged “everyone” in areas hit by