亚洲尘埃
空气污染
环境科学
四分位数
空气污染物
污染物
环境卫生
相对风险
污染
大气科学
毒理
人口学
气象学
地理
医学
气溶胶
化学
生物
内科学
地质学
社会学
有机化学
置信区间
生态学
作者
Jong Tae Lee,Ji Young Son,Yong Sung Cho
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.envres.2007.06.004
摘要
Recent papers have reported that Asian dust events have been associated with increased risks of all-cause mortality and rates of respiratory illness. The current study was designed to estimate the relative risk of mortality associated with Asian dust events. We used the daily counts of non-accidental deaths, air pollution and meteorological data in Seoul, Korea from 2000 to 2004. We divided all days during the study period into two groups according to the presence or absence of Asian dust events. For each group, we conducted time-series analysis to estimate the relative risk of total non-accidental death when the concentration of each air pollutant increased by the inter-quartile range (IQR). The average concentrations of every air pollutant on the days without a dust event were lower than those on the days with such an event. We found that the effect sizes of air pollution on daily death rates in the model without Asian dust events were larger than those in the model with Asian dust events, and were statistically significant for all air pollutants (PM10, CO, NO2, and SO2) except for O3. Our results suggest that we are likely to underestimate the risk of urban air particles if we analyze the effect size of air pollution on daily mortality during Asian dust events. We hypothesize that the real health effect is much larger than previous results suggested.
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