Wong Chit-Ming, Ou Chun-Quan, Chan King-Pan, Chau Yuen-Kwan, Thach Thuan-Quoc, Yang Lin, Chung Roger Yat-Nork, Thomas Graham Neil, Peiris Joseph Sriyal Malik, Wong Tze-Wai, Hedley Anthony Johnson, Lam Tai-Hing
Department of Community Medicine, School of Public Health, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.
Environ Health Perspect. 2008 Sep;116(9):1189-94. doi: 10.1289/ehp.10850.
Poverty is a major determinant of population health, but little is known about its role in modifying air pollution effects.
We set out to examine whether people residing in socially deprived communities are at higher mortality risk from ambient air pollution.
This study included 209 tertiary planning units (TPUs), the smallest units for town planning in the Special Administrative Region of Hong Kong, China. The socioeconomic status of each TPU was measured by a social deprivation index (SDI) derived from the proportions of the population with a) unemployment, b) monthly household income < US$250, c) no schooling at all, d) one-person household, e) never-married status, and f ) subtenancy, from the 2001 Population Census. TPUs were classified into three levels of SDI: low, middle, and high. We performed time-series analysis with Poisson regression to examine the association between changes in daily concentrations of ambient air pollution and daily number of deaths in each SDI group for the period from January 1996 to December 2002. We evaluated the differences in pollution effects between different SDI groups using a case-only approach with logistic regression.
We found significant associations of nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter < 10 mum, and ozone with all nonaccidental and cardiovascular mortality in areas of middle or high SDI (p < 0.05). Health outcomes, measured as all nonaccidental, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality, in people residing in high SDI areas were more strongly associated with SO(2) and NO(2) compared with those in middle or low SDI areas.
Neighborhood socioeconomic deprivation increases mortality risks associated with air pollution.
贫困是人群健康的主要决定因素,但对于其在改变空气污染影响方面的作用却知之甚少。
我们着手研究居住在社会贫困社区的人群因环境空气污染导致更高死亡风险的情况。
本研究纳入了209个三级规划单元(TPU),这是中国香港特别行政区城镇规划的最小单元。每个TPU的社会经济地位通过社会剥夺指数(SDI)来衡量,该指数源自2001年人口普查中具有以下情况的人口比例:a)失业;b)家庭月收入低于250美元;c)未接受任何学校教育;d)单人家庭;e)未婚状态;f)转租情况。TPU被分为三个SDI水平:低、中、高。我们采用泊松回归进行时间序列分析,以检验1996年1月至2002年12月期间每个SDI组中环境空气污染日浓度变化与每日死亡人数之间的关联。我们使用基于病例的逻辑回归方法评估不同SDI组之间污染影响的差异。
我们发现,在中等或高SDI地区,二氧化氮、二氧化硫、空气动力学直径小于10微米的颗粒物以及臭氧与所有非意外死亡和心血管死亡之间存在显著关联(p < 0.05)。与中等或低SDI地区相比,居住在高SDI地区人群的所有非意外、心血管和呼吸死亡等健康结局与二氧化硫和二氧化氮的关联更强。
社区社会经济剥夺会增加与空气污染相关的死亡风险。