Mount Sinai School of Medicine, in New York City, USA.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2011 May;30(5):871-8. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2010.1279. Epub 2011 May 4.
There has been little research to date on the linkages between air pollution and infectious respiratory illness in children, and the resulting health care costs. In this study we used data on air pollutants and national hospitalizations to study the relationship between fine particulate air pollution and health care charges and costs for the treatment of bronchiolitis, an acute viral infection of the lungs. We found that as the average exposure to fine particulate matter over the lifetime of an infant increased, so did costs for the child's health care. If the United States were to reduce levels of fine particulate matter to 7 percent below the current annual standard, the nation could save $15 million annually in reduced health care costs from hospitalizations of children with bronchiolitis living in urban areas. These findings reinforce the need for ongoing efforts to reduce levels of air pollutants. They should trigger additional investigation to determine if the current standards for fine-particulate matter are sufficiently protective of children's health.
迄今为止,针对空气污染与儿童传染性呼吸道疾病之间的关联及其所导致的医疗保健费用,相关研究甚少。在本研究中,我们利用空气污染数据和国家住院数据,研究了细颗粒物空气污染与毛细支气管炎(一种肺部急性病毒感染)的治疗相关的保健费用和成本之间的关系。我们发现,随着婴儿一生中平均暴露于细颗粒物的增加,儿童保健费用也随之增加。如果美国将细颗粒物水平降低到当前年平均标准以下 7%,那么居住在城市地区的毛细支气管炎患儿的住院治疗保健费用每年可减少 1500 万美元。这些发现进一步证实了需要持续努力来降低空气污染物的水平。这些发现还应该促使开展更多的调查,以确定细颗粒物的现行标准是否足以保护儿童健康。