ARTÍCULO
TITULO

The Short-Term Effects of Visibility and Haze on Mortality in a Coastal City of China: A Time-Series Study

Shaohua Gu    
Jun Yang    
Alistair Woodward    
Mengmeng Li    
Tianfeng He    
Aihong Wang    
Beibei Lu    
Xiaobo Liu    
Guozhang Xu and Qiyong Liu    

Resumen

Few studies have been conducted to investigate the acute health effects of visibility and haze, which may be regarded as proxy indicators of ambient air pollution. We used a distributed lag non-linear model (DLNM) combined with quasi-Poisson regression to estimate the relationship between visibility, haze and mortality in Ningbo, a coastal city of China. We found that the mortality risk of visibility was statistically significant only on the current day, while the risk of haze and PM10 peaked on the second day and could last for three days. When the visibility was less than 10 km, each 1 km decrease of visibility at lag 0 day was associated with a 0.78% (95% CI: 0.22?1.36%) increase in total mortality and a 1.61% (95% CI: 0.39?2.85%) increase in respiratory mortality. The excess risk of haze at lag 0?2 days on total mortality, cardiovascular and respiratory mortality was 7.76% (95% CI: 3.29?12.42%), 7.73% (95% CI: 0.12?15.92%) and 17.77% (95% CI: 7.64?28.86%), respectively. Greater effects of air pollution were observed during the cold season than in the warm season, and the elderly were at higher risk compared to youths. The effects of visibility and haze were attenuated by single pollutants. These findings suggest that visibility and haze could be used as surrogates of air quality where pollutant data are scarce, and strengthen the evidence to develop policy to control air pollution and protect vulnerable populations.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Jamal Mamkhezri,Alok K. Bohara,Alejandro Islas Camargo     Pág. 249 - 267
We utilize a time-series semi-parametric Poisson regression approach, incorporating natural cubic splines for temperature, to study the short-term associations between PM10 and daily mortality due to cardiovascular, respiratory, and cardiorespiratory eve... ver más
Revista: Atmósfera

 
Kurt Heil, Anna Lehner and Urs Schmidhalter    
Field experiments were conducted to test different agronomic practices, such as soil cultivation, fertilization, and pest and weed management, in highly controlled plot cultivation. The inter-annual yields and the interpretation of such experiments is hi... ver más
Revista: Climate

 
Shan Shu and Hui Ma    
Previous studies have examined the restorative benefits of soundscapes on adults’ cognitive performance, but it was unclear whether those benefits would be possible for children. In this paper, two experiments applied a before–after design to... ver más

 
Carlos Garza, David A. Martinez, Jihyung Yoon, Brett S. Nickerson and Kyung-Shin Park    
We investigated effects of 10-month telephone aftercare intervention following primary obesity intervention on changes in body fat percentage, physical fitness, and lipid profiles in obese Hispanic children. Seventy-one obese children were randomly assig... ver más

 
Daniel Badulescu, Ramona Simut, Alina Badulescu and Andrei-Vlad Badulescu    
National and global health policies are increasingly recognizing the key role of the environment in human health development, which is related to its economic and social determinants, such as income level, technical progress, education, quality of jobs, ... ver más