环境卫生
四分位间距
医学
入射(几何)
登革热
传染病(医学专业)
公共卫生
梅毒
疾病
免疫学
内科学
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)
光学
物理
护理部
作者
Li Chen,Wen Yuan,Mengjie Geng,Rongbin Xu,Yi Xing,Bo Wen,Yun-Hsuan Wu,Xiang Ren,Yue Shi,Qian Zhang,Xinli Song,Qin Yang,Wang Rui,Jianuo Jiang,Ziqi Dong,Jieyu Liu,Tongjun Guo,Zhiying Song,Liping Wang,Yinghua Ma,Yanhui Dong,Yi Song,Jun Ma
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.172299
摘要
This study assesses the association of short-term exposure to PM2.5 (particles ≤2.5 μm) on infectious diseases among Chinese children and adolescents. Analyzing data from 507 cities (2008–2021) on 42 diseases, it focuses on PM2.5 components (black carbon (BC), ammonium (NH4+), inorganic nitrate (NO3−), organic matter (OM), and sulfate (SO42−)). PM2.5 constituents significantly associated with incidence. Sulfate showed the most substantial effect, increasing all-cause infectious disease risk by 2.72 % per interquartile range (IQR) increase. It was followed by BC (2.04 % increase), OM (1.70 %), NO3− (1.67 %), and NH4+ (0.79 %). Specifically, sulfate and BC had pronounced impacts on respiratory diseases, with sulfate linked to a 10.73 % increase in seasonal influenza risk and NO3− to a 16.39 % rise in tuberculosis. Exposure to PM2.5 also marginally increased risks for gastrointestinal, enterovirus, and vectorborne diseases like dengue (7.46 % increase with SO42−). Sexually transmitted and bloodborne diseases saw an approximate 6.26 % increase in incidence, with specific constituents linked to diseases like hepatitis C and syphilis. The study concludes that managing PM2.5 levels could substantially reduce infectious disease incidence, particularly in China's middle-northern regions. It highlights the necessity of stringent air quality standards and targeted disease prevention, aligning PM2.5 management with international guidelines for public health protection.
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