Koman Patricia D, Hogan Kelly A, Sampson Natalie, Mandell Rebecca, Coombe Chris M, Tetteh Myra M, Hill-Ashford Yolanda R, Wilkins Donele, Zlatnik Marya G, Loch-Caruso Rita, Schulz Amy J, Woodruff Tracey J
University of Michigan School of Public Health, Environmental Health Sciences Department in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
University of Michigan School of Public Health, Environmental Health Sciences Department in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and presently a research fellow in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and the Robert and Arlene Kogod Center on Aging at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota.
World Med Health Policy. 2018 Mar;10(1):7-54. doi: 10.1002/wmh3.257. Epub 2018 Mar 12.
Pregnant women are uniquely susceptible to adverse effects of air pollution exposure due to vulnerabilities and health consequences during pregnancy (e.g., hypertensive disorders of pregnancy [HDP]) compared to the general population. Because the Clean Air Act (CAA) creates a duty to protect at-risk groups, the regulatory assessment of at-risk populations has both policy and scientific foundations. Previously, pregnant women have not been specially protected in establishing the margin of safety for the ozone and particulate matter (PM) standards. Due to physiological changes, pregnant women can be at greater risk of adverse effects of air pollution and should be considered an at-risk population. Women with preexisting conditions, women experiencing poverty, and groups that suffer systematic discrimination may be particularly susceptible to cardiac effects of air pollutants during pregnancy. We rigorously reviewed 11 studies of over 1.3 million pregnant women in the United States to characterize the relationship between ozone or PM exposure and HDP. Findings were generally mixed, with a few studies reporting a joint association between ozone or PM and social determinants or pre-existing chronic health conditions related to HDP. Adequate evidence associates exposure to PM with an adverse effect of HDP among pregnant women not evident among non-gravid populations.
与普通人群相比,孕妇由于孕期的脆弱性和健康后果(如妊娠高血压疾病[HDP]),特别容易受到空气污染暴露的不利影响。由于《清洁空气法》(CAA)规定了保护高危人群的义务,对高危人群的监管评估具有政策和科学基础。此前,在确定臭氧和颗粒物(PM)标准的安全边际时,孕妇并未得到特别保护。由于生理变化,孕妇可能更易受到空气污染的不利影响,应被视为高危人群。患有既往疾病的妇女、贫困妇女以及遭受系统性歧视的群体在孕期可能尤其易受空气污染物对心脏的影响。我们严格审查了美国130多万名孕妇的11项研究,以描述臭氧或PM暴露与HDP之间的关系。研究结果总体不一,少数研究报告了臭氧或PM与社会决定因素或与HDP相关的既往慢性健康状况之间的联合关联。充分的证据表明,孕妇接触PM会产生HDP的不利影响,而非妊娠人群中则不明显。