Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8855316 | Environment International | 2018 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Socioeconomic inequalities in air pollution exposure were different for modeled residential versus personal exposure, which has important implications for environmental justice and confounding in epidemiology studies. Exposure misclassification was dependent on several factors related to health, a potential source of bias in epidemiological studies. Quantile regression revealed that socioeconomic and ethnic inequalities in air pollution are often not uniform across the exposure distribution.
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Authors
Cathryn Tonne, Carles Milà , Daniela Fecht, Mar Alvarez, John Gulliver, James Smith, Sean Beevers, H. Ross Anderson, Frank Kelly,