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Choking before the first breath: Doctor explains the neonatal crisis in Gurgaon

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 18, 2025, 13:43 IST
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1/4

We need to discuss more about the Great Smog of North India

As a neonatologist practicing in the National Capital Region (NCR), I often witness a heartbreaking irony: the very first breath a newborn takes in Gurgaon is often laden with toxins. While the "Great Smog" of North India has become an annual headline, the medical community is now observing a more sinister trend. Air pollution is no longer just a seasonal respiratory irritant; it is a systemic threat that begins in the womb.



(Dr. Sanjay Wazir, MBBS, MD (Paediatrics), DM (Neonatology), Medical Director (NCR)- Neonatology, Motherhood hospital Gurgaon)

2/4

The vulnerability of the "smallest lungs"

Newborns and infants are not merely "miniature adults." Their physiology makes them uniquely susceptible to Gurgaon’s deteriorating air quality. A neonate’s respiratory rate is significantly higher than an adult’s, meaning they inhale more pollutants relative to their body weight. Furthermore, their lung alveoli—the tiny sacs where oxygen exchange occurs—are still developing. Exposure to PM2.5 and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) during this critical window can cause permanent structural damage, leading to reduced lung capacity that lasts a lifetime.

3/4

From womb to NICU

The impact starts well before delivery. Research increasingly shows that fine particulate matter can cross the placental barrier. When an expectant mother breathes polluted air, it triggers systemic inflammation and oxidative stress, which can restrict fetal growth. In our Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICUs) across Gurgaon, we see a measurable spike in:
Preterm births: Toxic air is a known trigger for early labor.
Low birth weight: Even full-term babies often arrive undernourished because of impaired placental function.
Respiratory distress: We are seeing "healthy" newborns requiring oxygen support or nebulization within days of birth due to acute bronchiolitis and pneumonia-like symptoms.

4/4

A call for urgent action

We are currently in the midst of a "paediatric emergency." While we advise parents to use HEPA air purifiers, avoid outdoor exposure during peak AQI hours, and maintain strict indoor hygiene, these are merely "band-aids" on a deep-seated wound.
As medical professionals, we advocate for a multi-sectoral shift. Protecting our children requires stricter construction dust protocols, a transition to clean energy, and better urban planning in Gurgaon. We are not just fighting for clearer skies; we are fighting for the fundamental right of every child to grow up with healthy lungs. If we do not act now, we are essentially sentencing a generation to a future of chronic respiratory disease.

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