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New study suggests link between golf courses and devastating disease

New study suggests link between golf courses and devastating disease

9 News12-05-2025

Your web browser is no longer supported. To improve your experience update it here A new study in the US has found a potential link between golf courses and Parkinson's disease. The research, published in JAMA Network Open , found that people living within five kilometres of golf courses are more than twice as likely to develop the devastating neurological illness. Researchers suspected it was linked to pesticide use across those courses, with the toxic chemicals leaching into the drinking water. A new study has suggested a link between golf courses and Parkinson's disease. (Getty) "This case-control study found the greatest risk of (Parkinson's) within one to three miles (1.6km to 4.8km) of a golf course, and that this risk generally decreased with distance," the researchers said. "Effect sizes were largest in water service areas with a golf course in vulnerable groundwater regions." However, other Parkinson's experts quoted by the UK Science Media Centre said many other factors needed to be ruled out before the disease could be clearly linked to the pesticides. Parkinson's is a devastating illness. (Getty) Parkinson's UK research director Dr David Dexter said multiple factors of the study had not been controlled. "Firstly, Parkinson's starts in the brain 10 to 15 years before diagnosis and the study didn't only use subjects who permanently lived in the area," he said. "This would not only affect participants' exposure, but also suggests their Parkinson's could have started before they moved around a golf course." He also pointed out the study had not analysed the drinking water in the affected areas for pesticide levels. Parkinson's UK research lead Dr Katherine Fletcher said many studies had investigated a potential link to pesticides. "The results have been varied, but overall suggest that exposure to pesticides may increase the risk of the condition," she said. "However, the evidence is not strong enough to show that pesticide exposure directly causes Parkinson's." health
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