Kheirbek Iyad, Ito Kazuhiko, Neitzel Richard, Kim Jung, Johnson Sarah, Ross Zev, Eisl Holger, Matte Thomas
New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Bureau of Environmental Surveillance and Policy, 125 Worth Street, CN34E, New York, NY, 10013, USA,
J Urban Health. 2014 Jun;91(3):415-31. doi: 10.1007/s11524-013-9857-0.
Exposure to environmental noise from traffic is common in urban areas and has been linked to increased risks of adverse health effects including cardiovascular disease. Because traffic sources also produce air pollutants that increase the risk of cardiovascular morbidity, associations between traffic exposures and health outcomes may involve confounding and/or synergisms between air pollution and noise. While prior studies have characterized intraurban spatial variation in air pollution in New York City (NYC), limited data exists on the levels and spatial variation in noise levels. We measured 1-week equivalent continuous sound pressure levels (Leq) at 56 sites during the fall of 2012 across NYC locations with varying traffic intensity and building density that are routinely monitored for combustion-related air pollutants. We evaluated correlations among several noise metrics used to characterize noise exposures, including Leq during different time periods (night, day, weekday, weekend), Ldn (day-night noise), and measures of intermittent noise defined as the ratio of peak levels to median and background levels. We also examined correlations between sound pressure levels and co-located simultaneous measures of nitric oxide (NO), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), fine particulate matter (PM2.5), and black carbon (BC) as well as estimates of traffic and building density around the monitoring sites. Noise levels varied widely across the 56 monitoring sites; 1-week Leq varied by 21.6 dBA (range 59.1-80.7 dBA) with the highest levels observed during the weekday, daytime hours. Indices of average noise were well correlated with each other (r > 0.83), while indices of intermittent noise were not well correlated with average noise levels (r < 0.41). One-week Leq correlated well with NO, NO2, and EC levels (r = 0.61 to 0.68) and less so with PM2.5 levels (r = 0.45). We observed associations between 1-week noise levels and traffic intensity within 100 m of the monitoring sites (r = 0.58). The high levels of noise observed in NYC often exceed recommended guidelines for outdoor and personal exposures, suggesting unhealthy levels in many locations. Associations between noise, traffic, and combustion air pollutants suggest the possibility for confounding and/or synergism in intraurban epidemiological studies of traffic-related health effects. The different spatial pattern of intermittent noise compared to average noise level may suggest different sources.
在城市地区,接触交通产生的环境噪声十分常见,且已被证明与包括心血管疾病在内的不良健康影响风险增加有关。由于交通源还会产生增加心血管发病风险的空气污染物,交通暴露与健康结果之间的关联可能涉及空气污染与噪声之间的混杂和/或协同作用。虽然先前的研究已经描述了纽约市(NYC)市内空气污染的空间变化,但关于噪声水平及其空间变化的数据有限。2012年秋季,我们在纽约市56个地点测量了1周等效连续声压级(Leq),这些地点交通强度和建筑密度各异,且会定期监测与燃烧相关的空气污染物。我们评估了用于表征噪声暴露的几个噪声指标之间的相关性,包括不同时间段(夜间、白天、工作日、周末)的Leq、昼夜等效连续感觉噪声级(Ldn)以及定义为峰值水平与中位数及背景水平之比的间歇性噪声测量值。我们还研究了声压级与监测点同时测量的一氧化氮(NO)、二氧化氮(NO2)、细颗粒物(PM2.5)和黑碳(BC)以及监测点周围交通和建筑密度估计值之间的相关性。56个监测点的噪声水平差异很大;1周Leq变化了21.6分贝(范围为59.1 - 80.7分贝),工作日白天时段观测到的水平最高。平均噪声指标之间相关性良好(r > 0.83),而间歇性噪声指标与平均噪声水平相关性不佳(r < 0.41)。1周Leq与NO、NO2和元素碳(EC)水平相关性良好(r = 0.61至0.68),与PM2.5水平相关性较弱(r = 0.45)。我们观察到1周噪声水平与监测点100米范围内的交通强度之间存在关联(r = 0.58)。在纽约市观测到的高噪声水平常常超过室外和个人暴露的推荐指南,这表明许多地方的噪声水平不健康。噪声、交通和燃烧空气污染物之间的关联表明,在与交通相关的健康影响的市内流行病学研究中可能存在混杂和/或协同作用。与平均噪声水平相比,间歇性噪声的不同空间模式可能表明其来源不同。