Castro Alberto, Künzli Nino, Götschi Thomas
University of Zurich, Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Prevention Institute, Physical Activity and Health Unit, Hirschengraben 84, 8001 Zurich, Switzerland.
Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute Basel (Swiss TPH), Socinstrasse 57, 4051 Basel, Switzerland; University of Basel, Socinstrasse 57, 4051 Basel, Switzerland.
Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2017 Jul;220(5):829-839. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2017.03.012. Epub 2017 Apr 5.
Exposure to urban air pollution has been associated with adverse effects on cardio-vascular and respiratory health, both short and long term. Consequently, governments have applied policies to reduce air pollution. Quantitative health impact assessments of hypothetic changes in air pollution have been conducted at national and global level, but assessments of observed air pollution changes associated with specific clean air policies at a local or regional scale remain scarce. This study estimates health impacts attributable to a decrease in PM and NO exposure in the Agglomeration of Lausanne-Morges (ALM), Switzerland, between 2005 and 2015, corresponding to the implementation period of a supra-municipal plan of measures to reduce air pollution in different sectors such as transport, energy, and industry (called Plan OPair 05). The health impact assessment compares health effects attributed to air pollution exposure levels in 2015 (reference case) with those in 2005 (counterfactual scenario), using 2015 as baseline for all other input data. In the ALM, the modeled PM exposure reduction of 3.3μg/m from 2005 to 2015 prevents 26 premature deaths (equivalent to around 290 years of life lost), 215 hospitalization days due to cardio-vascular and respiratory diseases as well as approximately 47,000 restricted activity days annually. Monetized health impacts of the reduction of PM exposure are valued at approximately CHF 36 million annually. Immaterial costs, mainly related to the economic valuation of years of life lost, dominate the monetized health impacts (90% of total value), while savings at the workplace (net loss in production and reoccupation costs) amount to about CHF 1.9 million, and savings in health care costs to about CHF 0.5 million. The assessment is sensitive to the value assigned to immaterial costs and to uncertainties in the relative risk estimates, whereas variations in the baseline year (i.e. using 2005 data instead of 2015 data) affect results to a much lower degree. The alternative calculation based on NO exposure, which dropped by 5.6μg/m, suggests the prevention of 51 premature deaths (equivalent to around 550 years of life lost) overall impacts valued at CHF 49 million. All in all, the reduction in mortality due to the air quality improvements accounts for (depending on the considered pollutant) about 1% to 2% of total all-cause annual mortality in the ALM population or 4-8 times larger than the annual traffic fatalities in the ALM.
暴露于城市空气污染中已被证明与心血管和呼吸系统健康的短期和长期不良影响有关。因此,各国政府已实施政策以减少空气污染。在国家和全球层面已对空气污染假设性变化进行了定量健康影响评估,但在地方或区域尺度上对与特定清洁空气政策相关的观测到的空气污染变化进行的评估仍然很少。本研究估计了2005年至2015年期间瑞士洛桑 - 莫尔日城市群(ALM)中PM和NO暴露减少所带来的健康影响,这一时期对应着一项超市级措施计划的实施期,该计划旨在减少交通、能源和工业等不同部门的空气污染(称为Plan OPair 05)。健康影响评估将2015年(参考案例)空气污染暴露水平所导致的健康影响与2005年(反事实情景)的进行比较,所有其他输入数据均以2015年为基线。在ALM中,从2005年到2015年模拟的PM暴露减少3.3μg/m可预防26例过早死亡(相当于约290年的生命损失)、因心血管和呼吸系统疾病导致的215个住院日以及每年约47,000个活动受限日。PM暴露减少所带来的健康影响货币化估值约为每年瑞士法郎3600万。非物质成本主要与生命损失年数的经济估值相关,在货币化健康影响中占主导地位(占总价值的90%),而工作场所的节省(生产净损失和重新就业成本)约为瑞士法郎190万,医疗保健成本节省约为瑞士法郎50万。该评估对赋予非物质成本的值以及相对风险估计中的不确定性敏感,而基准年的变化(即使用2005年数据而非2015年数据)对结果的影响程度要低得多。基于NO暴露的替代计算显示,NO暴露下降了5.6μg/m,总体上可预防51例过早死亡(相当于约550年的生命损失),影响估值为瑞士法郎4900万。总而言之,空气质量改善导致的死亡率降低(取决于所考虑的污染物)约占ALM人口年度全因死亡率的1%至2%,或者比ALM年度交通死亡人数大4至8倍。