Department of Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, 665 Huntington Avenue, Building 1, Room 1401, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Department of Occupational Safety and Health, China Medical University, 91 Hsueh-Shih Road, Taichung, 40402, Taiwan.
Environ Health. 2019 Jan 28;18(1):9. doi: 10.1186/s12940-019-0448-8.
Exposure to ambient particulate matter generated from coal-fired power plants induces long-term health consequences. However, epidemiologic studies have not yet focused on attributing these health burdens specifically to energy consumption, impeding targeted intervention policies. We hypothesize that the generating capacity of coal-fired power plants may be associated with lung cancer incidence at the national level.
Age- and sex-adjusted lung cancer incidence from every country with electrical plants using coal as primary energy supply were followed from 2000 to 2016. We applied a Poisson regression longitudinal model, fitted using generalized estimating equations, to estimate the association between lung cancer incidence and per capita coal capacity, adjusting for various behavioral and demographic determinants and lag periods.
The average coal capacity increased by 1.43 times from 16.01 gigawatts (GW) (20002004) to 22.82 GW (20102016). With 1 kW (KW) increase of coal capacity per person in a country, the relative risk of lung cancer increases by a factor of 59% (95% CI = 7.0%~ 135%) among males and 85% (95% CI = 22%~ 182%) among females. Based on the model, we estimate a total of 1.37 (range = 1.34 ~ 1.40) million standardized incident cases from lung cancer will be associated with coal-fired power plants in 2025.
These analyses suggest an association between lung cancer incidence and increased reliance on coal for energy generation. Such data may be helpful in addressing a key policy question about the externality costs and estimates of the global disease burden from preventable lung cancer attributable to coal-fired power plants at the national level.
燃煤电厂产生的环境颗粒物暴露会导致长期的健康后果。然而,流行病学研究尚未专门针对这些健康负担归因于能源消耗,从而阻碍了有针对性的干预政策。我们假设,燃煤电厂的发电能力可能与国家层面的肺癌发病率有关。
从 2000 年到 2016 年,我们跟踪了每个使用煤炭作为主要能源供应的国家的年龄和性别调整后的肺癌发病率。我们应用泊松回归纵向模型,使用广义估计方程进行拟合,以估计肺癌发病率与人均煤炭容量之间的关联,同时调整了各种行为和人口统计学决定因素以及滞后期。
平均煤炭容量从 2000 年至 2004 年的 160.1 吉瓦(GW)增加到 2010 年至 2016 年的 228.2 GW,增加了 1.43 倍。在一个国家中,人均煤炭容量每增加 1 千瓦(KW),男性肺癌的相对风险增加 59%(95%CI=7.0%135%),女性增加 85%(95%CI=22%182%)。根据该模型,我们估计,到 2025 年,与燃煤电厂相关的肺癌将新增 137 万例(范围=1.34~1.40)标准化发病病例。
这些分析表明,肺癌发病率与增加对煤炭发电的依赖之间存在关联。这些数据可能有助于解决一个关键的政策问题,即从全球疾病负担的角度出发,考虑到可预防的肺癌,燃煤电厂的外部成本和估计值。