AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how different sources of air pollution (specifically PM2.5) affect health outcomes, particularly respiratory issues and emergencies in Atlanta, GA over 12 years.
  • It uses a model that integrates several methods to identify and quantify the contributions of these pollution sources while addressing the uncertainties in the estimates.
  • Findings indicate that increases in PM2.5 from biomass burning are linked with more respiratory emergencies, while results for cardiovascular issues are mixed, highlighting the importance of considering different pollution sources in health studies.

Article Abstract

Background: Despite evidence suggesting that air pollution-related health effects differ by emissions source, epidemiologic studies on fine particulate matter (PM2.5) infrequently differentiate between particles from different sources. Those that do rarely account for the uncertainty of source apportionment methods.

Methods: For each day in a 12-year period (1998-2010) in Atlanta, GA, we estimated daily PM2.5 source contributions from a Bayesian ensemble model that combined four source apportionment methods including chemical transport and receptor-based models. We fit Poisson generalized linear models to estimate associations between source-specific PM2.5 concentrations and cardiorespiratory emergency department visits (n = 1,598,117). We propagated uncertainty in the source contribution estimates through analyses using multiple imputation.

Results: Respiratory emergency department visits were positively associated with biomass burning and secondary organic carbon. For a 1 µg/m increase in PM2.5 from biomass burning during the past 3 days, the rate of visits for all respiratory outcomes increased by 0.4% (95% CI 0.0%, 0.7%). There was less evidence for associations between PM2.5 sources and cardiovascular outcomes, with the exception of ischemic stroke, which was positively associated with most PM2.5 sources. Accounting for the uncertainty of source apportionment estimates resulted, on average, in an 18% increase in the standard error for rate ratio estimates for all respiratory and cardiovascular emergency department visits, but inflation varied across specific sources and outcomes, ranging from 2% to 39%.

Conclusions: This study provides evidence of associations between PM2.5 sources and some cardiorespiratory outcomes and quantifies the impact of accounting for variability in source apportionment approaches.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6768727PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/EDE.0000000000001089DOI Listing

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