Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4442469 Atmospheric Environment 2008 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectivesTo describe the degree of annoyance caused by air pollution and noise in pregnant women in a birth cohort; to determine the modifying factors and their relation with exposure to ambient nitrogen dioxide (NO2).MethodsThe study population was 855 pregnant women in Valencia, Spain. Annoyance caused by air pollution and noise, and explanatory factors were obtained from 786 pregnant women through a questionnaire. NO2 levels were determined combining measurements at 93 points within the area of study and using geostatistical techniques (kriging).ResultsIn all 7.9% of the women reported high annoyance caused by air pollution and 13.1% high annoyance caused by noise. There was a significant difference in the degree of annoyance due to both air pollution and noise depending on the area where the women lived and their working status. The degree of annoyance correlated better with measured NO2 at the municipality level (air pollution: r=0.53; noise: r=0.44) than at the individual level (air pollution and noise: r=0.21). On multivariate analysis, being a housewife, higher NO2 levels and high traffic density were associated with higher degrees of annoyance.ConclusionsThere was a high percentage of women who perceived medium–high annoyance due to noise and air pollution. Annoyance caused by environmental pollutants could lead to some psychological effects, which impair the quality of life, or even physiological ones, which affect prenatal development.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Atmospheric Science
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