Estimation of age-related vulnerability to air pollution: assessment of respiratory health at local scale
Estimation of age-related vulnerability to air pollution: assessment of respiratory health at local scale
This paper demonstrates association of short-term variation in pollution and health outcomes within the same geographical area for a typical urban setting in the northern part of the UK from time series analysis. It utilises publicly available datasets for regulated air pollutants (PM10, NO2, SO2, CO and O3), meteorology and respiratory hospital admissions (and mortality) between April 2002 and December 2005 to estimate the respiratory health effect of pollution exposure, mainly in the elderly. Our results show that PM10 and O3 are positively associated with respiratory hospital admissions in the elderly, specifically in the age group 70–79. CO effects seem to be concentrated on the most elderly age group (80+) whereas NO2 seems to have the opposite age-related effect, with lower effects on the more elderly
829-837
Namdeo, Anil
9f4cbee9-77e7-471e-8c0b-b02a1188fc4c
Tiwary, Abhishek
f948aa5f-5c42-42b0-8bcb-d8ea5e0d58f8
Farrow, Ewan
fa38465c-4598-4e6c-9b95-29cbe34aad47
2011
Namdeo, Anil
9f4cbee9-77e7-471e-8c0b-b02a1188fc4c
Tiwary, Abhishek
f948aa5f-5c42-42b0-8bcb-d8ea5e0d58f8
Farrow, Ewan
fa38465c-4598-4e6c-9b95-29cbe34aad47
Namdeo, Anil, Tiwary, Abhishek and Farrow, Ewan
(2011)
Estimation of age-related vulnerability to air pollution: assessment of respiratory health at local scale.
Environment International, 37 (5), .
(doi:10.1016/j.envint.2011.02.002).
(PMID:21420174)
Abstract
This paper demonstrates association of short-term variation in pollution and health outcomes within the same geographical area for a typical urban setting in the northern part of the UK from time series analysis. It utilises publicly available datasets for regulated air pollutants (PM10, NO2, SO2, CO and O3), meteorology and respiratory hospital admissions (and mortality) between April 2002 and December 2005 to estimate the respiratory health effect of pollution exposure, mainly in the elderly. Our results show that PM10 and O3 are positively associated with respiratory hospital admissions in the elderly, specifically in the age group 70–79. CO effects seem to be concentrated on the most elderly age group (80+) whereas NO2 seems to have the opposite age-related effect, with lower effects on the more elderly
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: 2011
Organisations:
Civil Maritime & Env. Eng & Sci Unit
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 354513
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/354513
ISSN: 0160-4120
PURE UUID: eaa20a07-0898-4efb-aee3-444ad052a672
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 12 Jul 2013 10:23
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 14:20
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Anil Namdeo
Author:
Abhishek Tiwary
Author:
Ewan Farrow
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics