Since its inception in 2000, the American Lung Association "State of the Air" report has used a methodology that starts with reliable quality-assured data from EPA and applies an unbiased grading system to provide credible, easy-to-understand information to the public about the air they breathe.
Statistical Methodology: The Air Quality Data
Description of County Grading System
Did You Know?
- Breathing ozone irritates the lungs, resulting in something like a bad sunburn within the lungs.
- People of color and those earning lower incomes are often disproportionately affected by air pollution that put them at higher risk for illnesses.
- Do you live near, or work on or near a busy highway? Pollution from the traffic may put you at greater risk of harm.
- Particles are smaller than 1/30th the diameter of a human hair. When you inhale them, they are small enough to get past the body's natural defenses.
- This Administration is trying to roll back or create loopholes in core healthy air protections under the Clean Air Act. The Lung Association opposes these actions that will add pollution to the air we breathe.
- Air pollution is a serious health threat. It can trigger asthma attacks, harm lung development in children, and can even be deadly.
- More than 20.8 million people live in counties that got an F for all three air pollution measures in State of the Air 2020.
- Breathing in particle pollution can increase the risk of lung cancer, according to the World Health Organization.
- Particle pollution can also cause early death and heart attacks, strokes and emergency room visits for people with asthma and cardiovascular disease.
- Millions of people are especially vulnerable to the effects of air pollution, including infants, older adults and people with lung diseases like asthma.
- More than 4 out of 10 people live where the air they breathe earned an F in State of the Air 2021.
- Climate change increases the risk of wildfires that spread particle pollution and ozone in the smoke.
- Climate change enhances conditions for ozone to form and makes it harder to keep ozone from forming.
- Cutting air pollution through the Clean Air Act will prevent at least 230,000 deaths and save $2 trillion annually by 2020.
- 150 million people live in counties that received an F for either ozone or particle pollution in State of the Air 2020.
- Ozone and particle pollution are both linked to increased risk of lower birth weight in newborns.
- You can protect your family by checking the air quality forecasts in your community and avoiding exercising or working outdoors when the unhealthy air is expected.
- People who work or exercise outside face increased risk from the effects of air pollution.