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Global Effect Factors for Exposure to Fine Particulate Matter.

Authors :
Fantke, Peter
Fantke, Peter
McKone, Thomas E
Tainio, Marko
Jolliet, Olivier
Apte, Joshua S
Stylianou, Katerina S
Illner, Nicole
Marshall, Julian D
Choma, Ernani F
Evans, John S
Fantke, Peter
Fantke, Peter
McKone, Thomas E
Tainio, Marko
Jolliet, Olivier
Apte, Joshua S
Stylianou, Katerina S
Illner, Nicole
Marshall, Julian D
Choma, Ernani F
Evans, John S
Source :
Environmental science & technology; vol 53, iss 12, 6855-6868; 0013-936X
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We evaluate fine particulate matter (PM2.5) exposure-response models to propose a consistent set of global effect factors for product and policy assessments across spatial scales and across urban and rural environments. Relationships among exposure concentrations and PM2.5-attributable health effects largely depend on location, population density, and mortality rates. Existing effect factors build mostly on an essentially linear exposure-response function with coefficients from the American Cancer Society study. In contrast, the Global Burden of Disease analysis offers a nonlinear integrated exposure-response (IER) model with coefficients derived from numerous epidemiological studies covering a wide range of exposure concentrations. We explore the IER, additionally provide a simplified regression as a function of PM2.5 level, mortality rates, and severity, and compare results with effect factors derived from the recently published global exposure mortality model (GEMM). Uncertainty in effect factors is dominated by the exposure-response shape, background mortality, and geographic variability. Our central IER-based effect factor estimates for different regions do not differ substantially from previous estimates. However, IER estimates exhibit significant variability between locations as well as between urban and rural environments, driven primarily by variability in PM2.5 concentrations and mortality rates. Using the IER as the basis for effect factors presents a consistent picture of global PM2.5-related effects for use in product and policy assessment frameworks.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Environmental science & technology; vol 53, iss 12, 6855-6868; 0013-936X
Notes :
application/pdf, Environmental science & technology vol 53, iss 12, 6855-6868 0013-936X
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1287354848
Document Type :
Electronic Resource