Department of Management Sciences, COMSATS University Islamabad, Attock Campus, Punjab 43600, Pakistan.
Swiss School of Public Health (SSPH+), Hirschengraben 82, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2019 Oct 28;16(21):4148. doi: 10.3390/ijerph16214148.
The rapid economic growth in Asian countries has witnessed a persistent increase in air pollution complementing adverse health challenges for children in these countries. Quantification of health effects attributable to air pollution (PM) is important in policy implications to tackle air pollution and associated health problems. This study aims to explore the nexus between air pollution and neonates' deaths embedded in acute respiratory infection. We collected panel data from the 12 most vulnerable Asian countries over the period of 2000-2017 and analyzed through the fixed-effect model. Empirical results show a positive relation between air pollution, temperature, and neonates' deaths in the studied Asian countries. The results have attested negative impacts of income and education while positive effect of population density on neonates' deaths due to acute respiratory infection. Diagnostic and prognostic measures have checked the pace of the respiratory diseases caused by PM and resultant deaths in Asian countries; yet alarming factors, like mounting industrial air pollution and rapid expansion of industrial zones in urban areas, need to be addressed in policy implications for long term sustainable solutions.
亚洲国家经济的快速增长见证了空气污染的持续增加,这给这些国家的儿童带来了不良的健康挑战。量化空气污染(PM)对健康的影响对于解决空气污染和相关健康问题的政策具有重要意义。本研究旨在探讨空气污染与急性呼吸道感染中新生儿死亡之间的关系。我们收集了 2000-2017 年期间来自 12 个最脆弱的亚洲国家的面板数据,并通过固定效应模型进行了分析。实证结果表明,在研究的亚洲国家中,空气污染、温度与新生儿死亡之间存在正相关关系。研究结果表明,收入和教育对新生儿因急性呼吸道感染而死亡有负面影响,而人口密度对新生儿因急性呼吸道感染而死亡有正面影响。针对 PM 引起的呼吸道疾病和亚洲国家的死亡情况,已经采取了诊断和预测措施,但需要在政策中解决一些令人担忧的因素,如不断增加的工业空气污染和城市地区工业区的快速扩张,以实现长期可持续解决方案。