People living in urban areas report significantly worse hay fever symptoms according to the first study to compare pollution levels with the severity and duration of real-time symptoms.

The University of Manchester led team studied 36,145 symptom reports submitted over 5 years – from 2016 to 2020 – by over 700 Britons using a citizen science application called Britain Breathing.

The study, published in Scientific Reports today (insert date), compares self-reported allergy symptoms in urban and rural locations.

The severity of three symptoms captured by the ap: runny nose, sore eyes and wheezy breathing, were roughly twice as severe in urban areas than in rural ones across all years.

The study combined pollution measurements and pollen and meteorological data taken from the UK Met Office with the real-time, geo-positioned reports to examine the relationship between symptom severity and air quality.

The analysis shows that urban areas record significantly higher symptom severity and longer symptom duration for all years except 2017. Rural areas did not record significantly higher symptom severity in any year.

Symptom reports were labelled as urban or rural using land-use data from the UK’s Office for National Statistics.

Symptom severity was significantly correlated with ozone levels. Ozone has previously been linked to respiratory problems.

One of the study authors- immunologist Professor Sheena Cruickshank said: “The worldwide prevalence of allergic respiratory disease has risen considerably in recent years.

“However hay fever affects people differently and can change over a lifetime and data is lacking on how environmental factors may influence this.

“This study provides evidence that urban surroundings may exacerbate hay fever and asthma symptoms.

“It also provides a broader picture of chronic health issues experienced by hay fever and asthma sufferers, as opposed to only observing those with more acute and/or problematic reactions.

“These differences in allergy symptoms may be due to variation in the levels of pollutants, pollen counts and seasonality across land-use types.”

Professor of Computer Science Caroline Jay said: “The relationship between where people lived and the symptoms they experience was clear, but why people experience worse symptoms in urban areas is complex. There may be many aspects of the city environment that have a negative impact on respiratory health.”

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