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Associations of daily levels of PM10 and NO2 with emergency hospital admissions and mortality in Switzerland : trends and missed prevention potential over the last decade
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 3178804
Author(s) Perez, Laura; Grize, Leticia; Infanger, Denis; Kuenzli, Nino; Sommer, Hansjoerg; Alt, Gian-Marco; Schindler, Christian
Author(s) at UniBasel Perez, Laura
Grize, Leticia
Künzli, Nino
Schindler, Christian
Year 2015
Title Associations of daily levels of PM10 and NO2 with emergency hospital admissions and mortality in Switzerland : trends and missed prevention potential over the last decade
Journal Environmental research
Volume 140
Pages / Article-Number 554-561
Keywords Air pollution, Time-series, PM10, NO2, Daily mortality, Daily hospital admissions, Emergency
Abstract

In most regions of the world, levels and constituents of the air pollution mixture have substantially changed over the last decades.; To evaluate if the effects of PM10 and NO2 on daily emergency hospital admissions and mortality have changed during a ~10 year period in Switzerland; to retrospectively estimate prevention potential of different policy choices.; Thirteen Poisson-regression models across Switzerland were developed using daily PM10 and NO2 levels from central monitors and accounting for several temporal and seasonal confounders. Time trends of effects were evaluated with an interaction variable. Distributed lag models with 28 days exposure window were used to retrospectively predict missed prevention potential for each region.; Overall, emergency hospitalizations and mortality from any medical cause increased by 0.2% (95% Confidence Interval [95% CI]: 0.01, 0.33) and 0.2% (95% CI: -0.1, 0.6) for a 10µg/m(3) increment of PM10, and 0.7% (95% CI: 0.1, 1.3) for NO2 and mortality. Over the study period, the association between respiratory emergencies and PM10 changed by a factor of 1.017 (95% CI: 1.001, 1.034) and by a factor of 0.977 [95% CI: 0.956, 0.998]) for respiratory mortality among the elderly for NO2. During the study period, abatement strategies targeting a 20% lower overall mean would have prevented four times more cases than abating days exceeding daily standards.; During the last decade, the short term effects of PM10 and NO2 on hospitalizations and mortality in Switzerland have almost not changed. More ambitious strategies of air pollutant reduction in Switzerland would have had non negligible public health benefits.

Publisher Elsevier
ISSN/ISBN 1096-0953
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A6411217
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1016/j.envres.2015.05.005
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26037106
ISI-Number WOS:000357904100064
Document type (ISI) Article
 
   

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