Shen Ying, Wu Yiyun, Chen Guangdi, Van Grinsven Hans J M, Wang Xiaofeng, Gu Baojing, Lou Xiaoming
Department of Neonatology, Children's Hospital, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310003, PR China.
Policy Simulation Laboratory, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, PR China.
Environ Pollut. 2017 May;224:631-637. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2017.02.047. Epub 2017 Feb 28.
China is experiencing severe and persistent air pollution, with concentrations of fine particulate matters (PM) reaching unprecedentedly high levels in many cities. Quantifying the detrimental effects on health and their costs derived from high PM levels is crucial because of the unsolved challenges to mitigate air pollution in the following decades. Using the daily monitoring data on PM concentrations and clinic visits, we found a non-linear increase of respiratory diseases, but not for other diseases (e.g., digestive diseases) under severe air pollution. We found an increase of respiratory diseases by 1% for each 10 μg m increase in PM when the annual average daily PM concentration was less than 50 μg m; while this ratio was doubled (around 2%) with the daily PM concentration larger than 50 μg m. Under severe air pollution (PM concentration >150 μg m), the respiratory diseases increased by over 50% compared to that in clean days. Children are more sensitive to the severe air pollution. The increase of clinic visits, especially for adults, was observed mainly in bigger (>500 beds) hospitals. Re-allocating medical resources (e.g., doctors) from big hospitals to community hospitals can benefit the respiratory patients due to air pollution. The total medical cost of clinic visits of respiratory diseases derived from PM pollution was estimated at 17.2-57.0 billion Yuan in 2014 in China, accounting for 0.5-1.6% of national total health expenditure. Because these medical costs only represent a small part of total health cost derived from air pollution, the reduction of associated health costs would be an important co-benefit of implementation of air pollution preventive strategies.
中国正面临着严重且持续的空气污染问题,许多城市的细颗粒物(PM)浓度达到了前所未有的高水平。鉴于在接下来的几十年里减轻空气污染仍面临未解决的挑战,量化高PM水平对健康的有害影响及其成本至关重要。利用PM浓度的每日监测数据和门诊就诊情况,我们发现在严重空气污染情况下,呼吸系统疾病呈非线性增加,但其他疾病(如消化系统疾病)并非如此。当年度日均PM浓度低于50μg/m时,PM每增加10μg/m,呼吸系统疾病增加1%;而当日均PM浓度大于50μg/m时,这一比例翻倍(约为2%)。在严重空气污染(PM浓度>150μg/m)情况下,与清洁天气相比,呼吸系统疾病增加了50%以上。儿童对严重空气污染更为敏感。门诊就诊量的增加,尤其是成人的就诊量,主要在规模较大(>500张床位)的医院中观察到。将大医院的医疗资源(如医生)重新分配到社区医院,对于因空气污染而患病的呼吸系统疾病患者有益。2014年,中国因PM污染导致的呼吸系统疾病门诊就诊总医疗费用估计在172亿至570亿元之间,占全国卫生总支出的0.5%至1.6%。由于这些医疗费用仅占空气污染导致的总健康成本的一小部分,降低相关健康成本将是实施空气污染预防策略的一项重要协同效益。