Ambient air pollution and emergency department visits for asthma in Erie County, New York 2007-2012

被引:38
作者
Castner, Jessica [1 ,2 ]
Guo, Lingfei [3 ]
Yin, Yong [4 ]
机构
[1] SUNY Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14260 USA
[2] Rockefeller Univ, Heilbrunn Family Ctr Res Nursing Scholar, 1230 York Ave, New York, NY 10021 USA
[3] Medpace, Cincinnati, OH USA
[4] SUNY Buffalo, Coll Arts & Sci, Dept Econ, Buffalo, NY USA
关键词
Air pollution; Asthma; Environmental exposures; Ambient air quality; Emergency department utilization; SHORT-TERM ASSOCIATIONS; QUALITY HEALTH INDEX; CASE-CROSSOVER; GLOBAL BURDEN; TIME-SERIES; OZONE; CHILDREN; DISEASE; MORBIDITY; MORTALITY;
D O I
10.1007/s00420-017-1270-7
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
8% of the US population has asthma. Air pollution is linked to exacerbation in susceptible individuals. The objective was to identify air pollutants that increased the risk of asthma emergency department visits during a time wherein a polluting factory was criminally convicted, changing local air pollutant levels. An ecological time-series design used a daily count of asthma emergency visits from 2007 to 2012 as the dependent variable. Independent variables air pollutants (NO2, PM2.5 CO, and O-3), controlling for meteorological conditions, were analyzed using time-series and Poisson GLM models. 76,651 emergency asthma visits were included with an average of 35 visits per day (SD = 9.2, range 11-80) in a stationary time series. Increased visit volume in fall and spring had no associations to the air pollutants. Associations between individual air pollutants occurred in otherwise low-volume months for asthma emergency visits. The strongest relationship was an 11.6% increase in the asthma emergency visit rate during the month of June. In monthly groupings that removed most of the autumn and spring months, O-3, PM2.5, CO, and NO2 were associated with 5, 4, 2, and 2% increases in asthma emergency visits, respectively. CO was the only pollutant with a negative association with asthma emergency visits, occurring in the month of April. Pollutants NO2, PM2.5 CO, and O-3 were associated with increased emergency asthma visits in some, but not all months of the year. Air pollution's impact on asthma emergencies may be masked by other, more influential seasonal triggers, such as infections or allergies.
引用
收藏
页码:205 / 214
页数:10
相关论文
共 45 条
  • [1] Ambient air pollution and emergency department visits for asthma: a multi-city assessment of effect modification by age
    Alhanti, Brooke A.
    Chang, Howard H.
    Winquist, Andrea
    Mulholland, James A.
    Darrow, Lyndsey A.
    Sarnat, Stefanie Ebelt
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EXPOSURE SCIENCE AND ENVIRONMENTAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2016, 26 (02) : 180 - 188
  • [2] Long-term exposure to air pollution and the incidence of asthma: meta-analysis of cohort studies
    Anderson, H. Ross
    Favarato, Graziella
    Atkinson, Richard W.
    [J]. AIR QUALITY ATMOSPHERE AND HEALTH, 2013, 6 (01) : 47 - 56
  • [3] Association between ozone and emergency department visits: an ecological study
    Choi, Mona
    Curriero, Frank C.
    Johantgen, Meg
    Mills, Mary Etta C.
    Sattler, Barbara
    Lipscomb, Jane
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH, 2011, 21 (03) : 201 - 221
  • [4] Daily effects of air pollutants and pollen types on asthma and COPD hospital emergency visits in the industrial and Mediterranean Spanish city of Cartagena
    Cirera, L.
    Garcia-Marcos, L.
    Gimenez, J.
    Moreno-Grau, S.
    Tobias, A.
    Perez-Fernandez, V.
    Elvira-Rendeles, B.
    Guillen, J. J.
    Navarro, C.
    [J]. ALLERGOLOGIA ET IMMUNOPATHOLOGIA, 2012, 40 (04) : 231 - 237
  • [5] Use of a total traffic count metric to investigate the impact of roadways on asthma severity: a case-control study
    Cook, Angus G.
    deVos, Annemarie J. B. M.
    Pereira, Gavin
    Jardine, Andrew
    Weinstein, Philip
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH, 2011, 10
  • [6] American Thoracic Society and Marron Institute Report Estimated Excess Morbidity and Mortality Caused by Air Pollution above American Thoracic Society-Recommended Standards, 2011-2013
    Cromar, Kevin R.
    Gladson, Laura A.
    Perlmutt, Lars D.
    Ghazipura, Marya
    Ewart, Gary W.
    [J]. ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN THORACIC SOCIETY, 2016, 13 (08) : 1195 - 1201
  • [7] Climate Change and Air Pollution: Effects on Respiratory Allergy
    D'Amato, Gennaro
    Pawankar, Ruby
    Vitale, Carolina
    Lanza, Maurizia
    Molino, Antonio
    Stanziola, Anna
    Sanduzzi, Alessandro
    Vatrella, Alessandro
    D'Amato, Maria
    [J]. ALLERGY ASTHMA & IMMUNOLOGY RESEARCH, 2016, 8 (05) : 391 - 395
  • [8] Air Pollution and Acute Respiratory Infections Among Children 0-4 Years of Age: An 18-Year Time-Series Study
    Darrow, Lyndsey A.
    Klein, Mitchel
    Flanders, W. Dana
    Mulholland, James A.
    Tolbert, Paige E.
    Strickland, Matthew J.
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2014, 180 (10) : 968 - 977
  • [9] The use of alternative pollutant metrics in time-series studies of ambient air pollution and respiratory emergency department visits
    Darrow, Lyndsey A.
    Klein, Mitchel
    Sarnat, Jeremy A.
    Mulholland, James A.
    Strickland, Matthew J.
    Sarnat, Stefanie E.
    Russell, Armistead G.
    Tolbert, Paige E.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EXPOSURE SCIENCE AND ENVIRONMENTAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2011, 21 (01) : 10 - 19
  • [10] Asthma Morbidity and Ambient Air Pollution Effect Modification by Residential Traffic-Related Air Pollution
    Delfino, Ralph J.
    Wu, Jun
    Tjoa, Thomas
    Gullesserian, Sevan K.
    Nickerson, Bruce
    Gillen, Daniel L.
    [J]. EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2014, 25 (01) : 48 - 57