Air Quality Index and Lung Health: Why the Claim of “No Direct Correlation” Is Scientifically Unsound
On December 18, 2025, the Minister of State for Environment and Climate Change, Kirti Vardhan Singh, told the Rajya Sabha that there is “no direct correlation between higher Air Quality Index (AQI) levels and lung diseases” and that no “conclusive data” exists to establish such a link. While this statement may appear cautious or technical on the surface, it fundamentally misrepresents how public health science understands causation and risk. More importantly, it stands in direct contradiction to decades of peer-reviewed scientific research, global health authority assessments, and clinical evidence. The suggestion that poor air quality, as measured by AQI, lacks a proven connection to lung disease risks normalising exposure to polluted air and undermines urgent public health action in a country already facing a severe air pollution crisis. Understanding What AQI Actually Measures The Air Quality Index is not an abstract or arbitrary indicator. It is a scientifically designed tool tha...