Back to Search Start Over

Estimating neighborhood-based mortality risk associated with air pollution: A prospective study.

Authors :
Tao, Chengzhe
Liu, Zhaoyin
Fan, Yun
Yuan, Yiting
Wang, Xinru
Qiao, Ziyan
Li, Zhi
Xu, Qiaoqiao
Lou, Zhe
Wang, Haowei
Li, Xiang
Li, Ruiyun
Lu, Chuncheng
Source :
Journal of Hazardous Materials. Aug2024, Vol. 475, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Effect modification of integrated neighborhood environment on associations of air pollution with mortality remained unclear. We analyzed data from UK biobank prospective study (n = 421,650, median 12.5 years follow-up) to examine disparities of mortality risk associated with air pollution among varied neighborhood settings. Fine particulate matter (PM 2.5), PM 10 and nitrogen dioxide (NO 2) were measured and assigned to each participants' address. Diverse ecological and societal settings of neighborhoods were integrated with principal component analysis and categorized into disadvantaged, intermediate and advantaged levels. We estimated mortality risk associated with air pollution across diverse neighborhoods using Cox regression. We calculated community-level proportions of mortality attributable to air pollutants. There was evidence of higher all-cause and respiratory disease mortality risk associated with PM 2.5 and NO 2 among those in disadvantaged neighborhoods. In disadvantaged communities, air pollutants explained larger proportions of deaths and such disparities persisted over past decades. Across 2010–2021, reducing PM 2.5 and NO 2 to 10 μg/m3 (World Health Organization limits) would save 87,000 (52,000−120,000) and 91,000 (37,000−145,000) deaths of populations aged ≥ 40 years, with 150 000 deaths occurred in disadvantaged neighborhood settings. These findings suggested that disadvantaged neighborhoods can exacerbate mortality risk associated with air pollution. [Display omitted] • Societal and ecological neighborhoods modify the health effects of air pollution. • Disadvantaged neighborhoods exacerbate mortality risk associated with air pollution. • Neighborhood disparities of air pollution-linked mortality persisted in past decades. • Interventions of air pollution may be prioritized to disadvantaged neighborhoods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03043894
Volume :
475
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Hazardous Materials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178021980
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2024.134861