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Air Pollution and Health: An introduction

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Title: Air Pollution and Health: An introduction


1
Air Pollution and Health An introduction
  • Ferran Ballester

2
Air pollution projects involvedAPHEAAPHEISEME
CAS
  • Unit of Epidemiology Statistics
  • Valencian School of Studies for Health-EVES

3
Literature
  • There are many articles and books on air
    pollution and health
  • There are also useful resources in Internet.

4
OBJECTIVES
  • Introduce the basic concepts on air pollution and
    health
  • Comment on the most used epidemiological designs
  • Present the results of some of the main studies
    carried out in recent years

5
Air, Water and Places
Hippocrates
6
Air Pollution Major Episodes in the mid XXth
century
  • Meuse Valley, Belgium (1930)
  • Donora, Pennsilvania, USA (1948)
  • London, UK (1952)

7
The London Fog
8
The London Fog
1000
5,000
900
4,500
800
4,000
700
3,500
600
3,000
Daily deaths, London
500
2,500
400
2,000
Black Smoke Central Hall mg/m3
300
1,500
200
1,000
100
0,500
0
0,000
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
December 1952
9
Anual average of black smoke (in ?g/m3) London
1958-1971.
10
Major emission sources of air pollutants

SO2
VOCs
NOX
PM
Pb
Domestic Dwellings
Power Generation
Industry
Stationary Emission Sources
CO
NOX
VOCs
Pb
PM
Diesel
Mobile Emission Sources (Road Traffic)
11
Major Air Pollutants (1)
12
Major Air Pollutants (2)
13
Health Effects of Air Pollution
  • Mortality
  • Cardiopulmonary Hospitalizations
  • Emergency department or outpatient visits
  • Symptomatic exacerbations
  • Changes in lung function
  • Cardiopulmonary symptoms
  • Upper respiratory illnesses
  • Lower respiratory illnesses

14
Other Effects of Air Pollution
  • Immune System Allergies
  • Allergic Asthma, Allergic Rhinoconjunctivitis
  • Extrinsic Allergic Alveolitis / Hypersensitivity
  • Central Nervous System
  • Toxic Damage of Nerve Cells
  • Mental retardation
  • Carcinogenic Effects
  • Lung Cancer, Leukemia
  • Reproductive effects
  • Infant mortality, Low weight birth

15
Deaths
ADVERSE HEALTH EFFECTS
Hospitalizations
Emergencies
Visits to doctors
Restricted activity
Medication
Symptoms
Annoyance, discomfort
Number of persons concerned
16
Health effect assessment
  • Toxicological studies
  • Epidemiological studies

17
Basic study designs in air pollution epidemiology
18
Exposure assesment approaches in epidemiology of
air pollution
  • Categorical exposure (high vs low)
  • Measured (or modeled) outdoor concentrations
  • Measurement of indoor and outdoor concentrations
  • Estimation of individual exposure using indoor,
    outdoor along time-activity diaries
  • Direct measurement of personal exposures
  • Measurement of biomarkers of exposure

COST VALIDITY
19
Results from some epidemiological studies
  • Time series
  • Cohort studies
  • Intervention studies

20
Relationship between the factors implied in the
time series epidemiological studies of air
pollution
21

APHEA1 cities

Population gt 25,000,000
22
APHEA1 FINDINGS
  • 1. All pollutants studied have small acute
    effects on the daily total, cardiovascular and
    respiratory mortality.
  • 2. Particulates and ozone levels were
    consistently associated with respiratory and COPD
    admissions.
  • 3. NO2 levels were associated with asthma
    admissions.
  • 4. The effects were observed in locations where,
    in the majority of days, air pollutant levels
    were well below the set (W.H.O., E.C.,
    U.S.E.P.A.) standards at that time.

23
APHEA2
  • EC Funded
  • 30 cities
  • 43 million inhabitants
  • Period of study 5 years ( 1990-1996)

24
The EMECAS Project
25
EMECAS Combined estimates for mortality and air
pollution (1)
26
EMECAS Combined estimates for mortality and air
pollution (2)
27
EMECAS combined results for cardiovascular
admissions
28
Harvard Six-City Cohort StudyRelative risk of
mortality and long-term exposure to PM2.5Dockery
et al, 1993
RR
Annual mean PM2.5 (?g/m3)
29
Long-term exposure to fine particulates and
mortality in the ACS cohort (n500 000)Pope et
al, 2002
30
Long term effectsin mortality and indicators of
traffic-related air pollution in the
NetherlandsHoek et al, 2002
31
Intervention studies
  • Close of a steel mill in the Utah Valley ?
    particle levels,
  • ? morbidity, ? inflammatory process
  • Ban on marketing and sale of smoky coal in
    Dublin ? black smoke levels,
  • ? mortality
  • Introduction of gas with low sulphur in Hong
    Kong ? levels of SO2 and SO4,
  • ? mortality and respiratory
  • symptoms in children

32
Summary of estimates of particulate matter
effects (1)
33
Summary of estimates of particulate matter
effects (2)
34
Summary
  • Main acute effects
  • Increase in the number of deaths
  • Increase in hospital admissions and emergency
    visits, especially for cardio-respiratory causes
  • Alterations in lung performance, cardiac problems
    and other symptoms and discomfort
  • Main chronic effects
  • Increase in the risk of death
  • Increased cardio-respiratory morbidity and
    decline of pulmonary function

35
References
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