Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6316126 | Environmental Pollution | 2015 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Few studies on size-specific health effects of particulate matter have been conducted in Asia. We examined the association between both fine and coarse particles (PM2.5 and PM10â2.5) and mortality across 11 East Asian cities from 4 countries (Korea, Japan, Taiwan, and China). We performed a two-stage analysis: we generated city-specific estimates using a time-series analysis with a generalized additive model (Quasi-Poisson distribution), and estimated the overall effects by conducting a meta-analysis. Each 10âμg/m3 increase in PM2.5 (lag01) was associated with an increase of 0.38% (95% confidence interval = 0.21%-0.55%) in all causes mortality, 0.96% (0.46%-1.46%) in cardiovascular mortality, and 1% (0.23%-1.78%) in respiratory mortality. Each 10âμg/m3 increase in PM10â2.5 (lag01) was associated with cardiovascular mortality (0.69%, [0.05%-1.33%]), although this association attenuated after controlling for other pollutants, especially PM2.5. Increased mortality was associated with increasing PM2.5 and PM10â2.5 concentrations over 11 East Asian cities.
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Authors
Hyewon Lee, Yasushi Honda, Masahiro Hashizume, Yue Leon Guo, Chang-Fu Wu, Haidong Kan, Kweon Jung, Youn-Hee Lim, Seungmuk Yi, Ho Kim,