Air Quality Protection

Air quality is one of the highest-leverage longevity interventions almost nobody acts on. PM2.5 (fine particulate matter, particles smaller than 2.5 µm) is a confirmed risk factor for:

For an endurance athlete, the cardiovascular benefit of training in polluted air can be partially offset by the inflammatory and oxidative load from inhaled particulates.

This page is specifically relevant to someone splitting time between Korea and India — two regions with chronic PM2.5 problems on different schedules.

What PM2.5 actually is

The WHO 2021 guideline: annual average PM2.5 < 5 µg/m³; daily peaks < 15 µg/m³.

Most Korean and Indian cities exceed these guidelines on most days.

The Korea and India schedule

Korea (Seoul, Busan, etc.)

India

The interventions, in order of leverage

1. HEPA air purifier at home — the highest-leverage spend

The single best investment for long-term protection. Run a HEPA filter continuously in:

Specifications to look for:

Recommended brands and models (2026):

Avoid: UV “air sanitizers”, ionic purifiers without HEPA (they produce ozone, which is itself a pollutant).

Costs: USD 200–500 per unit. Filter replacement: USD 30–80 every 6–12 months depending on pollution load.

For a household running purifiers in two rooms, this is roughly USD 500–1,000 upfront and USD 100–200/year in filters. Compared to the cardiovascular and dementia risk reduction, this is the single highest-ROI longevity spend in the budget.

2. AQI app and behaviour modification

Install a real-time AQI app and check daily. Recommended apps:

AQI behavioural thresholds:

PM2.5 (µg/m³) AQI (US scale) Behaviour
< 12 0–50 (Good) Run outdoors freely
12–35 51–100 (Moderate) Run outdoors; consider lower-intensity if sensitive
35–55 101–150 (Unhealthy for sensitive) Move runs indoors or to less polluted area
55–150 151–200 (Unhealthy) Treadmill day. No outdoor cardio.
> 150 201+ (Very unhealthy / hazardous) Stay indoors as much as possible; mask outdoors

The key habit: check AQI before deciding morning training. Adapt the day accordingly. A treadmill in clean indoor air is dramatically better than a run in 150+ µg/m³.

3. Mask when running outdoors in elevated PM2.5

When PM2.5 is 55+ and you still need to be outside:

Mask compliance during exercise is hard — the resistance to airflow increases perceived effort. Lower intensity is the trade-off.

4. Indoor air-quality sources to fix

Even with outdoor air controlled, indoor air can be the bigger problem:

5. Bedroom door closed at night

If only one HEPA purifier, prioritise the bedroom and keep the door closed overnight. 8 hours of clean air during sleep is more valuable than 8 hours of mixed air across the apartment.

Specific behaviour change for endurance athletes

The athlete-specific trade-off: training outdoors in polluted air can do net harm. Some specific habits:

Move morning runs based on AQI

Lower training intensity in polluted air

Even at PM2.5 of 35–55, an easy outdoor run is cleaner than a tempo run because lower minute ventilation = lower total dose inhaled. Save the hard sessions for the treadmill on bad days.

Wash off after outdoor exposure

Particulates stick to skin and hair. A shower after an outdoor run in polluted air removes a meaningful portion of the surface deposit before it spreads to the bed and indoor air.

How much does this actually matter

A 2023 meta-analysis estimated that long-term exposure to PM2.5 above 25 µg/m³ accounts for roughly 6.4 years of life expectancy loss in heavily polluted cities like Delhi. For someone planning a 30-year retirement back in India, choosing a less polluted city (Mangalore, Coorg, Kochi over Delhi/Mumbai/Bangalore-centre) plus aggressive HEPA at home is plausibly a 3–5 year longevity intervention by itself.

This is one of the few interventions where the magnitude of impact is comparable to smoking cessation. It is treated as boring infrastructure and rarely discussed in longevity podcasts. It shouldn’t be.

See also