Department of Environmental Health, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Environmental Health, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA; Department of Biostatistics, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Lancet Planet Health. 2021 Oct;5(10):e689-e697. doi: 10.1016/S2542-5196(21)00204-7.
Long-term exposure to air pollution has been linked with an increase in risk of mortality. Whether existing US Environmental Protection Agency standards are sufficient to protect health is unclear. Our study aimed to examine the relationship between exposure to lower concentrations of air pollution and the risk of mortality.
Our nationwide cohort study investigated the effect of annual average exposure to air pollutants on all-cause mortality among Medicare enrolees from the beginning of 2000 to the end of 2016. Patients entered the cohort in the month of January following enrolment and were followed up until the end of the study period in 2016 or death. We restricted our analyses to participants who had only been exposed to lower concentrations of pollutants over the study period, specifically particulate matter less than 2·5 μg/m in diameter (PM) at a concentration of up to 12 μg/m, nitrogen dioxide (NO) at a concentration of up to 53 parts per billion (ppb), and summer ozone (O) at concentrations of up to 50 ppb. We adjusted for two types of covariates, which were individual level and postal code-level variables. We used a doubly-robust additive model to estimate the change in risk. We further looked at effect-measure modification by stratification on the basis of demographic and socioeconomic characteristics.
We found an increased risk of mortality with all three pollutants. Each 1 μg/m increase in annual PM concentrations increased the absolute annual risk of death by 0·073% (95% CI 0·071-0·076). Each 1 ppb increase in annual NO concentrations increased the annual risk of death by 0·003% (0·003-0·004), and each 1 ppb increase in summer O concentrations increased the annual risk of death by 0·081% (0·080-0·083). This increase translated to approximately 11 540 attributable deaths (95% CI 11 087-11 992) for PM, 1176 attributable deaths (998-1353) for NO, and 15 115 attributable deaths (14 896-15 333) for O per year for each unit increase in pollution concentrations. The effects were higher in certain subgroups, including individuals living in areas of low socioeconomic status. Long-term exposure to permissible concentrations of air pollutants increases the risk of mortality.
The US Environmental Protection Agency, National Institute of Environmental Health Services, and Health Effects Institute.
长期暴露于空气污染会增加死亡风险。目前尚不清楚美国环保署的现有标准是否足以保护健康。我们的研究旨在研究接触较低浓度的空气污染与死亡率之间的关系。
我们的全国性队列研究调查了 2000 年初至 2016 年底期间,大气污染物的年平均暴露对医疗保险参保者全因死亡率的影响。患者在登记后的 1 月进入队列,并在 2016 年底或死亡时进行随访。我们将分析仅限于在研究期间仅接触较低浓度污染物的参与者,具体来说是直径小于 2.5μm 的颗粒物(PM)浓度为 12μg/m 以下,二氧化氮(NO)浓度为 53 十亿分之一(ppb)以下,夏季臭氧(O)浓度为 50ppb 以下。我们调整了两种类型的协变量,分别是个体水平和邮政编码水平的变量。我们使用双重稳健加性模型来估计风险的变化。我们进一步根据人口统计学和社会经济特征进行分层,观察效果衡量的变化。
我们发现三种污染物都会增加死亡风险。每年 PM 浓度增加 1μg/m,绝对死亡年风险增加 0.073%(95%CI 0.071-0.076)。每年 NO 浓度增加 1ppb,死亡年风险增加 0.003%(0.003-0.004),夏季 O 浓度增加 1ppb,死亡年风险增加 0.081%(0.080-0.083)。这相当于每年 PM 浓度增加 1μg/m 可归因于约 11540 例死亡(95%CI 11087-11992),NO 增加 1176 例死亡(998-1353),O 增加 15115 例死亡(14896-15333)。这种效应在某些亚组中更高,包括生活在社会经济地位较低地区的个体。长期暴露于可允许的空气污染物浓度会增加死亡风险。
美国环保署、国家环境卫生科学研究所和健康影响研究所。