Archer V E
University of Utah School of Medicine, Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, Rocky Mountain Center for Occupational and Environmental Health, Salt Lake City.
Arch Environ Health. 1990 Nov-Dec;45(6):325-34. doi: 10.1080/00039896.1990.10118751.
A unique situation found in two Utah counties has made it possible to estimate the fraction of respiratory cancer and nonmalignant respiratory disease (NMRD) deaths, which are attributable to community air pollution (CAP) in one county. The two counties were very similar in many ways, including low smoking rates, until a steel mill constructed during WW II caused substantial CAP in one of them. Subsequent differences in mortality rates from both respiratory cancer and NMRD are striking. A third county, similar to many counties outside Utah, was included in the analysis for comparison. In one county, 30-40% of the respiratory cancer and NMRD deaths were attributable to CAP. In this county, NMRD deaths (but not respiratory cancer deaths) were slightly more frequent than in Salt Lake County where smoking rates were twice as high.
在犹他州的两个县出现了一种独特情况,这使得能够估算出一个县中因社区空气污染(CAP)导致的呼吸道癌症和非恶性呼吸道疾病(NMRD)死亡的比例。这两个县在很多方面非常相似,包括吸烟率较低,直到二战期间建造的一家钢铁厂在其中一个县造成了严重的社区空气污染。随后,呼吸道癌症和非恶性呼吸道疾病的死亡率差异显著。为了进行比较,分析中纳入了第三个与犹他州以外许多县类似的县。在其中一个县,30%至40%的呼吸道癌症和非恶性呼吸道疾病死亡可归因于社区空气污染。在这个县,非恶性呼吸道疾病死亡(但不包括呼吸道癌症死亡)比吸烟率高出两倍的盐湖县略为常见。