Wildfire smoke in California tied to autism risk; Beckham feud
[00:00] Cole Mercer: From Neural Newscast, I'm Cole Mercer.
[00:03] Daniel Brooks: And I'm Daniel Brooks.
[00:05] Cole Mercer: Today, a major health question in California.
[00:08] Cole Mercer: Can wildfire smoke exposure during pregnancy affect autism risk in children?
[00:15] Cole Mercer: Later, the Beckham Family Feud moves into the open after Brooklyn Peltz Beckham posts his first detailed public comments.
[00:23] Cole Mercer: Turning now to California.
[00:25] Cole Mercer: A new study links wildfire smoke in late pregnancy to a higher likelihood of an autism diagnosis.
[00:33] Cole Mercer: The research looks at health records for more than 200,000 births in Southern California,
[00:39] Cole Mercer: from 2006 through 2014.
[00:43] Cole Mercer: It estimates exposure using modeled PM2.5 levels at-home addresses during pregnancy.
[00:50] Cole Mercer: The strongest association shows up in the third trimester, especially during multi-day smoke stretches.
[00:58] Cole Mercer: The study reports about a 10% higher risk after one to five smoky days, 12% higher after six to ten, and 23% higher after more than ten.
[01:10] Daniel Brooks: The practical takeaway is risk management, not panic.
[01:15] Daniel Brooks: The authors and outside experts stress this is an association, not proof of cause.
[01:21] Daniel Brooks: And the effect size is modest.
[01:23] Daniel Brooks: There are also limits.
[01:25] Daniel Brooks: The exposure estimates are for outdoor air, not what people breathe indoors.
[01:30] Daniel Brooks: Researchers cannot see who used HEPA filters, wore masks, or stayed inside during smoke spikes.
[01:37] Cole Mercer: Still, the mechanism is plausible. Wildfire PM 2.5 can lodge deep in the lungs and enter the bloodstream.
[01:46] Cole Mercer: Researchers also note the third trimester is a critical window for brain growth and development.
[01:51] Daniel Brooks: For cities, the near-term issue is preparedness during smoke days,
[01:56] Daniel Brooks: clean air centers, clear alerts, and support for pregnant people and families.
[02:02] Daniel Brooks: Guidance often comes down to staying indoors, improving filtration, and following local public
[02:08] Daniel Brooks: health instructions.
[02:09] Cole Mercer: In other news, Brooklyn Peltz-Bekham says he does not want to reconcile with his family
[02:14] Cole Mercer: in his first direct public response to months of feud rumors.
[02:18] Daniel Brooks: In a series of Instagram posts, he alleges his parents and their team attacked him and
[02:24] Daniel Brooks: his wife, Nicola Peltz-Bekham, through press coverage.
[02:28] Daniel Brooks: He said,
[02:28] Daniel Brooks: He says he stayed quiet for years, but felt forced to respond publicly.
[02:33] Daniel Brooks: Sir David Beckham has not directly addressed the accusations.
[02:38] Cole Mercer: At the Ruled Economic Forum in Davos, he spoke more generally about social media and said
[02:44] Cole Mercer: children are allowed to make mistakes.
[02:46] Cole Mercer: The immediate impact is reputational because the Beckham's operate as a global brand across
[02:53] Cole Mercer: sport, fashion, and media.
[02:55] Cole Mercer: When a private dispute turns public, every statement becomes part of that brand narrative.
[03:01] Daniel Brooks: Next, we will be watching whether the family responds in a coordinated way or lets this play out online.
[03:09] Daniel Brooks: In the short term, the pressure point is attention, and attention tends to reward escalation.
[03:15] Cole Mercer: I'm Cole Mercer.
[03:17] Daniel Brooks: And I'm Daniel Brooks.
[03:18] Daniel Brooks: Neural Newscast is AI-assisted, human-reviewed.
[03:22] Daniel Brooks: View our AI Transparency Policy at neuralnewscast.com.
