Baccini Michela, Grisotto Laura, Catelan Dolores, Consonni Dario, Bertazzi Pier Alberto, Biggeri Annibale
Department of Statistics, Informatics and Applications "G. Parenti," University of Florence, Florence, Italy.
Environ Health Perspect. 2015 Jan;123(1):27-33. doi: 10.1289/ehp.1408218. Epub 2014 Oct 17.
Exposure to air pollution is associated with a short-term increase in mortality, and this field has begun to focus on health impact assessment.
Our aim was to estimate the impact of PM10 on mortality within 2 days from the exposure in the Italian region of Lombardy for the year 2007, at the municipality level, examining exposure entailed by daily intermunicipality commuting and accounting for uncertainty propagation.
We combined data from different sources to derive probabilistic distributions for all input quantities used to calculate attributable deaths (mortality rates, PM10 concentrations, estimated PM10 effects, and commuting flows) and applied a Monte Carlo procedure to propagate uncertainty and sample the distribution of attributable deaths for each municipality.
We estimated that annual average PM10 concentrations above the World Health Organization-recommended threshold of 20 μg/m3 were responsible for 865 short-term deaths (80% credibility interval: 475, 1,401), 26% of which were attributable to PM10 above the European Union limit of 40 μg/m3. Reducing annual average PM10 concentrations > 20 μg/m3 by 20% would have reduced the number of attributable deaths by 36%. The largest estimated impacts were along the basin of the Po River and in the largest cities. Commuting contributed to the spatial distribution of the estimated impact.
Our estimates, which incorporated uncertainty quantification, indicate that the short-term impact of PM10 on mortality in Lombardy in 2007 was notable, and that reduction in air pollution would have had a substantial beneficial effect on population health. Using commuting data helped to identify critical areas for prioritizing intervention.
接触空气污染与死亡率的短期上升有关,该领域已开始关注健康影响评估。
我们的目标是估计2007年意大利伦巴第地区市级层面PM10暴露后2天内对死亡率的影响,研究日常市际通勤带来的暴露情况,并考虑不确定性传播。
我们整合了不同来源的数据,以得出用于计算可归因死亡数的所有输入量(死亡率、PM10浓度、估计的PM10影响和通勤流量)的概率分布,并应用蒙特卡洛程序来传播不确定性并对每个市的可归因死亡数分布进行抽样。
我们估计,年度平均PM10浓度超过世界卫生组织建议的20μg/m³阈值导致了865例短期死亡(80%可信区间:475, 1401),其中26%归因于超过欧盟40μg/m³限值的PM10。将年度平均PM10浓度>20μg/m³降低20%将使可归因死亡数减少36%。估计影响最大的地区位于波河流域和最大的城市。通勤对估计影响的空间分布有贡献。
我们纳入不确定性量化的估计表明,2007年伦巴第地区PM10对死亡率的短期影响显著,空气污染的减少将对人群健康产生重大有益影响。使用通勤数据有助于确定优先干预的关键区域。