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Associations between ambient air pollution and mortality from all causes, pneumonia, and congenital heart diseases among children aged under 5 years in Beijing, China: A population-based time series study.

Authors :
Wang, Jing
Cao, Han
Sun, Dianqin
Qi, Zifan
Guo, Chunyue
Peng, Wenjuan
Sun, Yanyan
Xie, Yunyi
Liu, Xiaohui
Li, Bingxiao
Luo, Yanxia
Pan, Ying
Li, Yichen
Zhang, Ling
Source :
Environmental Research. Sep2019, Vol. 176, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Previous studies have mainly focused on the associations between particulate matters and infant mortality. However, evidence regarding the associations between gaseous pollutants and mortality among children aged <5 years remains sparse. The aim of this study was to investigate the associations between ambient air pollution and death among children aged <5 years in Beijing, China, and explore the impact of age, gender and specific causes of death on these associations. Concentrations of ambient air pollution and the number of deaths among children aged <5 years in Beijing from January 2014 to September 2016 were extracted from authoritative electronic databases. The associations were estimated for a single-month lag from the current month up to the previous 5 months (lag0-lag5) and moving averages of the current and previous months (lag01-lag05) using generalized additive Poisson regression (adjusted for time trends, season, meteorological variables and holidays). Subgroup analyses related to age, gender and specific diseases were performed. Two-pollutant models were used to evaluate the possible role of single pollutants. Sulfur dioxide (SO 2), nitrogen dioxide (NO 2) and carbon monoxide (CO) demonstrated the strongest associations with death among children aged <5 years at lag0, and the estimates decreased or even turned negative with the increasing lag periods. For an interquartile range increase in SO 2 , NO 2 and CO at lag0, the odds ratios (OR) were 1.332 (95% CI 1.152-1.539), 1.383 (95% CI 1.113-1.718) and 1.273 (95% CI 1.028-1.575). However, CO lost significance after adjusting for SO 2 and NO 2 , and PM 2.5 gained significance (OR 1.548, 95% CI 1.061-2.258) after adjusting for PM 10. The ORs for SO 2 and NO 2 remained the most stable across all two-pollutant models. The associations for children aged 1–5 years were stronger than those reported for infants at lag0 but lower at the other lag months. The pollutant associations were stronger for congenital heart disease-related death than overall and pneumonia-related death. We did not find significant differences in terms of gender. Exposure to air pollution may increase the incidence of death among children aged <5 years. SO 2 and NO 2 may be the most stable pollutants reflecting associations between air pollution and death, deserving further attention. Children with congenital heart diseases are more susceptible to air pollution. Therefore, it is urgent to implement the clean air targets established by WHO and reduce the exposure of children to air pollution. • Exposure to ambient air pollution may account for increased deaths among children aged <5 years in Beijing, China. • SO 2 and NO 2 may be the most stable pollutants reflecting the associations of death, deserving further attention. • Children with congenital heart diseases are more susceptible to air pollution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00139351
Volume :
176
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Environmental Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
138181768
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2019.108531