logo
Living Near a Golf Course Linked to Parkinson's. What to Do

Living Near a Golf Course Linked to Parkinson's. What to Do

WebMD09-05-2025

May 9, 2025 – Golf season is here, bringing joy and exercise to many. But new research has linked the links to a dangerous health risk, particularly for those living nearby.
People residing within 3 miles of a course faced a greater risk of developing Parkinson's disease, the new study shows.
Most of those people -- 90% -- shared a groundwater-sourced water service with the golf course. Others in the study who lived farther away but still shared water service with a golf course also had a higher risk of developing Parkinson's, a brain degeneration disorder that causes severe movement problems.
The reason? It could be exposure to pesticides that leach into groundwater and contaminate the drinking supply, the researchers say.
'In certain parts of the country, where summers are hot and humid, golf courses use pesticides to maintain the course aesthetics and keep bugs under control,' said lead author Brittany Krzyzanowski, PhD, a geographer and spatial epidemiologist at Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix.
'Some of these pesticides have been linked to negative health outcomes including Parkinson's disease,' Krzyzanowski said. 'So it's important to be mindful and take steps to mitigate exposure.'
What the Research Shows
The analysis included health and residence records for 419 people living in Minnesota and Wisconsin who were diagnosed with Parkinson's disease between 1991 and 2015. They ranged in age from 65 to 80, and the average age was 73. For the comparison group, each person was matched to 20 additional people without Parkinson's of the same age and gender.
Here's what the results showed:
The odds of developing Parkinson's disease increased 126% for people living within 1 mile of a golf course, compared to living more than 6 miles away. The heightened risk persisted within 3 miles of golf courses, but decreased beyond that.
The risk nearly doubled for people with shared water service with a golf course, compared to those without a shared service.
The greatest risk was for people living in areas with what's called 'karst topography,' which is 'a region with limestone bedrock that slowly dissolves over time, creating underground voids that allow water from the surface to move more rapidly through it,' Krzyzanowski said. 'This means that pesticides applied to grass or crops can more readily move into the groundwater supply after a rain.'
What We Don't Know
Like any analysis, this one had limitations.
It only looked at data for three years prior to diagnosis. Because Parkinson's can take up to 40 years to develop, the researchers want to do a follow-up study with 40 years of address data to see if there's any difference in the results. That would let them analyze whether risk changes based on how long someone lives near a course.
It can't account for changes in pesticide practices over time. 'Our study assumes exposure to pesticides on golf courses occurred many decades ago,' Krzyzanowski said. 'It's possible that the pesticide practices from years ago do not reflect the pesticide practices on these golf courses today.'
It can't prove anything. As with any observational study, this one couldn't show that living near a golf course causes Parkinson's disease, only that there appears to be an association between the two. For instance, the researchers noted that they were missing data on occupational history and genetic predisposition – key details that could confound the results.
What You Can Do
Should you move? The short answer is no. 'At this point, there is no need to consider moving if you live next to a golf course,' Krzyzanowski said.
But there are a few things you can do to help minimize exposure to pesticides.
Use a carbon water filter or reverse osmosis system. Both are 100% efficient at removing pesticides from drinking water, according to a separate 2024 study.
Ask the golf course what days and times they spray. Stay inside on those days.
Learn more about your tap water. Krzyzanowski recommends this website by the Environmental Working Group, which lets you search for water quality reports by ZIP code.
Keep golfing – but maybe bring your own water. There have not been any studies about Parkinson's risk and frequent golfers, but one study of golf course superintendents showed 'a pattern of pesticides-related cancers and a small portion of the subjects developed Parkinson's disease,' Krzyzanowski said.
Check out organic golf courses. Some include Pebble Beach Golf Links in California and Chambers Bay in Washington. There's also a program that certifies golf courses that work to protect natural resources, called the Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary Program for Golf.
What's Next?
Next up for the research team is an analysis of health records for 22 million people on Medicare and data about 16,000 golf courses. There is a weak but possible link between the courses and Parkinson's risk, according to preliminary results.
'We believe that results would strengthen if we had more accurate golf course location data. For this reason, we are working on crowdsourcing a nationwide golf course dataset,' Krzyzanowski said. 'The public can help us build this dataset via the instructions at z.umn.edu/golfmapping.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

RFK Jr. taps allies and COVID vaccine critics among picks for CDC advisory panel. Here's who's on the list.
RFK Jr. taps allies and COVID vaccine critics among picks for CDC advisory panel. Here's who's on the list.

CBS News

time11 minutes ago

  • CBS News

RFK Jr. taps allies and COVID vaccine critics among picks for CDC advisory panel. Here's who's on the list.

Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced Wednesday he's naming eight new advisers to serve on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's vaccine recommendations committee, after firing the committee's entire previous roster of 17 advisers. "All of these individuals are committed to evidence-based medicine, gold-standard science, and common sense. They have each committed to demanding definitive safety and efficacy data before making any new vaccine recommendations," Kennedy said Wednesday in a post on X. Kennedy's picks circumvented the usual CDC process for selecting members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices. In previous administrations, career agency officials — not political leaders — vetted potential experts before forwarding them to the department for the secretary's approval. The panel's influential recommendations are closely watched because they are directly tied to federal policies, like which vaccines insurers are required to cover. The picks announced by Kennedy include some close allies of the secretary and his inner circle. One of them, Dr. Robert Malone, worked on early research related to mRNA vaccine technology but was accused during the COVID-19 pandemic of spreading misinformation about the mRNA vaccines. He was with Kennedy and President Trump at the Trump election night celebration in Florida. "On the basis of data from all over the world, approximately three years ago it was my impression that the risk/benefit ratio of these products did not merit continued use in any cohort," Malone posted last month on his Substack about the mRNA COVID vaccines. Like Kennedy, Malone has questioned the benefits of measles vaccines during the recent record outbreak in Texas, which killed two children, and he has promoted unproven treatments for the virus. Another member picked by Kennedy is Dr. Martin Kulldorff, an epidemiologist who co-authored the pandemic-era Great Barrington Declaration criticizing COVID-19 restrictions, along with now-NIH Director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya. Bhattacharya has described Kulldorff as a close friend. Kulldorff previously worked with the CDC's outside vaccine advisers, before authoring an opinion piece in 2021 criticizing the agency's decision to pause use of Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine over safety concerns. He claimed he was fired from working with the committee over the opinion piece. Kulldorff later claimed he was fired from Harvard University for criticizing COVID-19 vaccine requirements. Dr. Cody Meissner, a pediatrics professor who previously served as a member of the Food and Drug Administration's own vaccines panel — the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee – was also named to the committee. Meissner opposed COVID-19 vaccine requirements for children. He also co-authored an opinion piece with now-FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary speaking out against masking of children during the pandemic. Another former member of the FDA vaccines panel who was picked by Kennedy is Vicky Pebsworth, a regional director of the National Association of Catholic Nurses. Pebsworth spoke at a 2020 meeting of the FDA vaccines committee, where she identified herself as the research director for the National Vaccine Information Center and "mother of a child injured by his 15-month well-baby shots in 1998." She said the center's position was that any "coercion and sanctions to persuade adults to take an experimental vaccine, or give it to their children, is unethical and unlawful." Kennedy also praised another pick, MIT professor Retsef Levi, saying: "Dr. Levi has collaborated with public health agencies to evaluate vaccine safety, including co-authoring studies on mRNA COVID-19 vaccines and their association with cardiovascular risks." Levi previously called for more detailed data from the COVID-19 vaccine trials, suggesting that changes to how Pfizer's shot was produced may have caused side effects. But Levi faced criticism for a paper co-authored with Florida Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo, which was cited in the state's move to recommend that young men not get mRNA COVID-19 vaccines. Experts condemned the paper for misleading methods that could inflate the risk. The views on vaccines of several of Kennedy's other picks are less clear. Kennedy said Dr. Michael A. Ross "contributed to national strategies for cancer prevention and early detection, including those involving HPV immunization," working with the CDC's breast and cervical cancer committee. Ross is described by Kennedy as an obstetrics and gynecology professor at George Washington University and Virginia Commonwealth University, though his name does not appear on directories for either university. Spokespeople for the two institutions did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Dr. James Pagano, described by Kennedy as a "strong advocate for evidence-based medicine," appears to have published little about vaccines or medicine. Records from the Medical Board of California list Pagano as being retired. Another Kennedy pick, Dr. Joseph Hibbeln, retired from the National Institutes of Health in 2020. His research portfolio previously covered nutritional intake of fatty acids like omega-3. Kennedy described him as bringing "expertise in immune-related outcomes, psychiatric conditions, and evidence-based public health strategies."

Tiny fragment of asteroid giving Field Museum scientists a glimpse 4.6 billion years into the past
Tiny fragment of asteroid giving Field Museum scientists a glimpse 4.6 billion years into the past

CBS News

time36 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Tiny fragment of asteroid giving Field Museum scientists a glimpse 4.6 billion years into the past

The Field Museum is the new temporary home to a tiny piece of pristine asteroid. The fragment of the asteroid Bennu, on loan from NASA, won't be on display for visitors, but will give scientists the chance to study an asteroid sample uncontaminated by Earth's atmosphere. A tiny, black fragment might not seem exciting, until a scientist explains it's a specimen from space. "It's an honor of a lifetime to be able to study this sample," said Field Museum curator Dr. Philipp Heck. How did Heck feel when the little rock first arrived at the museum and he held the vial containing the sample? "It was amazing. I was looking forward to that moment for a long time," he said. NASA's OSIRIS-REx mission was planned decades ago. In 2016, a spacecraft launched. In 2018, it arrived at Bennu, a near-Earth asteroid as wide as the Sears Tower is tall. The mission collected pieces of the asteroid and brought them back to Earth in 2023. "This is the first U.S. mission that sends a spacecraft to the asteroid and brings a sample back to Earth," said University of Chicago graduate student Yuke Zheng, who is part of the OSIRIS-REx sample analysis team. "It's a tiny, dark, black fragment that is fragile, so we want to protect it very carefully." She'll use the museum's scanning electron microscope to get an up-close look at a tiny sample of Bennu. "What struck me is how dark the sample is. I had never seen such a dark sample," Heck said. The fragment is like a time capsule, taking scientists back 4.6 billion years. "We believe Bennu contains part of the ingredients for life, and part of the ingredients of the formation of Earth," Heck said. Suddenly, a fragment at the bottom of a vial can have you pondering your place in the universe. "I've never studied a pristine sample from an asteroid," Heck said.

Cook County jury awards $20.5 million to family of girl who died from toxic levels of morphine
Cook County jury awards $20.5 million to family of girl who died from toxic levels of morphine

CBS News

time38 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Cook County jury awards $20.5 million to family of girl who died from toxic levels of morphine

A Cook County jury awarded more than $20 million in damages to the family of an 11-year-old girl who died from toxic levels of morphine. In October 2020, Ava Wilson was recovering from leukemia when she went for a follow-up appointment at Advocate Children's Hospital. During her appointment, she was crying from pain, and had difficulty walking, according to her family's attorneys. Lab tests revealed she had low platelet counts, low blood cell counts, high liver enzymes, and low blood pressure. She was discharged from Advocate Children's Hospital with instructions to take 15 milligrams of morphine every four hours, triple the amount of her previous prescriptions. A nurse practitioner also increased her gabapentin prescription. Approximately 36 hours after getting home, she died in her sleep from acute drug toxicity of several substances, including lethal levels of morphine in her system at the time of her death. Her family's attorneys said the hospital should have admitted Ava to the hospital to get her blood pressure under control and treat the cause of her pain, but simply sent her home with excessive pain medications. "Ava's body was yelling out to these clinicians, 'help me!', and they just ignored it," attorney Matthew Williams said. After a civil trial, a jury awarded her family $20.5 million in damages. "While nothing will ease the depth of Ava's loved ones' pain, the family appreciates that the jury recognized that Ava's death was preventable and that she should still be with them today," attorney Aaron Boeder said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store