The use of alternative pollutant metrics in time-series studies of ambient air pollution and respiratory emergency department visits

被引:0
|
作者
Lyndsey A Darrow
Mitchel Klein
Jeremy A Sarnat
James A Mulholland
Matthew J Strickland
Stefanie E Sarnat
Armistead G Russell
Paige E Tolbert
机构
[1] Emory University,
[2] Georgia Institute of Technology,undefined
关键词
air pollution; respiratory disease; emergency department visits; exposure assessment; criteria pollutants; time-series;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Various temporal metrics of daily pollution levels have been used to examine the relationships between air pollutants and acute health outcomes. However, daily metrics of the same pollutant have rarely been systematically compared within a study. In this analysis, we describe the variability of effect estimates attributable to the use of different temporal metrics of daily pollution levels. We obtained hourly measurements of ambient particulate matter (PM2.5), carbon monoxide (CO), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), and ozone (O3) from air monitoring networks in 20-county Atlanta for the time period 1993–2004. For each pollutant, we created (1) a daily 1-h maximum; (2) a 24-h average; (3) a commute average; (4) a daytime average; (5) a nighttime average; and (6) a daily 8-h maximum (only for O3). Using Poisson generalized linear models, we examined associations between daily counts of respiratory emergency department visits and the previous day's pollutant metrics. Variability was greatest across O3 metrics, with the 8-h maximum, 1-h maximum, and daytime metrics yielding strong positive associations and the nighttime O3 metric yielding a negative association (likely reflecting confounding by air pollutants oxidized by O3). With the exception of daytime metric, all of the CO and NO2 metrics were positively associated with respiratory emergency department visits. Differences in observed associations with respiratory emergency room visits among temporal metrics of the same pollutant were influenced by the diurnal patterns of the pollutant, spatial representativeness of the metrics, and correlation between each metric and copollutant concentrations. Overall, the use of metrics based on the US National Ambient Air Quality Standards (for example, the use of a daily 8-h maximum O3 as opposed to a 24-h average metric) was supported by this analysis. Comparative analysis of temporal metrics also provided insight into underlying relationships between specific air pollutants and respiratory health.
引用
收藏
页码:10 / 19
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Spatial considerations in a study of ambient air pollution and cardiorespiratory emergency department visits
    Samat, S. E.
    Klein, M.
    Peel, J. L.
    Mulholland, J.
    Samat, J. A.
    Flanders, W. D.
    Waller, L. A.
    Tolbert, P. E.
    EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2006, 17 (06) : S242 - S243
  • [32] Ambient air pollution and cardiovascular emergency department visits in potentially sensitive groups
    Peel, Jennifer L.
    Metzger, Kristi Busico
    Klein, Mitchel
    Flanders, W. Dana
    Mulholland, James A.
    Tolbert, Paige E.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2007, 165 (06) : 625 - 633
  • [33] Ambient air pollution and cardiorespiratory emergency department visits, 1993-2002
    Peel, JL
    Tolbert, PE
    Klein, M
    Metzger, KB
    Flanders, WD
    Mulholland, JA
    Todd, K
    EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2004, 15 (04) : S57 - S57
  • [34] Air pollution, weather, and respiratory emergency room visits in two northern New England cities: an ecological time-series study
    Wilson, AM
    Wake, CP
    Kelly, T
    Salloway, JC
    ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2005, 97 (03) : 312 - 321
  • [35] Ambient Air Pollution, Meteorological Factors and Outpatient Visits for Eczema in Shanghai, China: A Time-Series Analysis
    Li, Qiao
    Yang, Yingying
    Chen, Renjie
    Kan, Haidong
    Song, Weimin
    Tan, Jianguo
    Xu, Feng
    Xu, Jinhua
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2016, 13 (11):
  • [36] Lag effect of ambient temperature on respiratory emergency department visits in Beijing: a time series and pooled analysis
    Li, Xuan
    Zhang, Yongming
    Tian, Zhenbiao
    Wang, Jianping
    Zhao, Jinhua
    Lyu, Yuanjun
    Ni, Ying
    Guo, Yuming
    Cui, Zhuang
    Zhang, Wenyi
    Li, Changping
    BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2024, 24 (01)
  • [37] Ambient Air Pollution and Preterm Birth A Time-series Analysis
    Darrow, Lyndsey A.
    Klein, Mitchel
    Flanders, W. Dana
    Waller, Lance A.
    Correa, Adolfo
    Marcus, Michele
    Mulholland, James A.
    Russell, Armistead G.
    Tolbert, Paige E.
    EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2009, 20 (05) : 689 - 698
  • [38] Ambient air pollution and respiratory emergency department visits in Atlanta, August 1998-August 2000 (ARIES/SOPHIA)
    Peel, J
    Tolbert, P
    Klein, M
    Metzger, K
    Flanders, WD
    Todd, K
    Mulholland, J
    Ryan, PB
    Frumkin, H
    EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2002, 13 (04) : S124 - S124
  • [39] Time-series analysis on the relationship between air pollution and outpatient/emergency room visits of the hospitals in Beijing
    Pan, XC
    Wang, L
    Chang, G
    EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2005, 16 (05) : S39 - S39
  • [40] AMBIENT AIR POLLUTION AND DAILY EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT VISITS FOR ISCHEMIC STROKE IN EDMONTON, CANADA
    Szyszkowicz, Mieczyslaw
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL MEDICINE AND ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH, 2008, 21 (04) : 295 - 300