
Supplied and installed by Air Monitors, the monitors are part of the Mayor of London Sadiq Khan’s work to deliver the world’s most advanced and comprehensive network of air quality monitors in London to help investigate and improve London’s toxic air.
A recent study by King’s College London and the UK Health Alliance on Climate Change found 60% of hospitals and NHS facilities in inner London are located in areas that exceed the legal limit for air quality pollutants.
The Mayor’s new hospital monitors will support the NHS by providing real-time air quality measurements that will allow health professionals to take appropriate action to protect patients and employees – for example, warning patients about high pollution episodes and advising which hospital entrances have the lowest levels of pollution.
The first monitor is already up and running at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, with others due to be installed shortly at the Trust’s other three hospitals The Royal London, Whipps Cross and Newham Hospitals, as well as at Great Ormond Street Hospital, the Royal Free Hospital, Guy’s Hospital and St Thomas’ Hospital and other NHS sites in London.
The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan said, “Vulnerable hospital patients are more susceptible to the harmful effects of our toxic air pollution health crisis that harms lung growth and is linked to asthma, cancer and dementia.”
“I am working with London’s leading hospitals to install air pollution monitors and help find new ways to reduce pollution and protect patients.”
“I’m doing everything in my power to protect Londoners from polluted air including cleaning up our bus and taxi fleet and establishing the largest air quality monitoring network of any major city.”
“We are now counting down to the world’s first 24-hour seven-day-a-week Ultra Low Emission Zone in the central London congestion charge zone, which will help clean our air and reduce NOx road transport emissions in central London, including around many hospitals, by 45%.”
Air Monitors Managing Director Jim Mills added, “Air quality improvement measures should be targeted to protect the most vulnerable people. Therefore, I’m delighted to be expanding the network of AQMesh pods to include hospital sites.”
“Data from these locations will help to highlight pollution hotspots and ensure the solutions that our partners put in place are working.”