北京
环境卫生
微粒
煤燃烧产物
环境科学
煤
空气污染
中国
公共卫生
空气质量指数
污染
人口
质量浓度(化学)
医学
环境工程
环境保护
废物管理
地理
气象学
工程类
化学
护理部
考古
有机化学
物理化学
生物
生态学
作者
Hang Du,Yuanyuan Liu,Guoliang Shi,Feng Wang,Mike Z. He,Tiantian Li
标识
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.1c07290
摘要
The health effects of PM2.5 exposure have become a major public concern in developing countries. Identifying major PM2.5 sources and quantifying the health effects at the population level are essential for controlling PM2.5 pollution and formulating targeted emissions reduction policies. In the current study, we have obtained PM2.5 mass data and used positive matrix factorization to identify the major sources of PM2.5. We evaluated the relationship between short-term exposure to PM2.5 sources and mortality or hospital admissions in Beijing, China, using 441 742 deaths and 9 420 305 hospital admissions from 2013 to 2018. We found positive associations for coal combustion and road dust sources with mortality. Increased hospital admission risks were significantly associated with sources of vehicle exhaust, coal combustion, secondary sulfates, and secondary nitrates. Compared to the cool season, excess mortality risk estimates of coal combustion source were significantly higher in the warm season. Our findings show that reducing more toxic sources of PM2.5, especially coal emissions, and developing clean energy alternatives can have critical implications for improving air quality and protecting public health.
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