Dept. of Sanitary and Environmental Engineering, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, 31270-010, Brazil.
ArcelorMittal Brasil Sustainability Management, Belo Horizonte, 30130-915, Brazil.
Environ Sci Pollut Res Int. 2020 Oct;27(29):35889-35907. doi: 10.1007/s11356-020-07772-x. Epub 2020 Jan 29.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), in 2016, 91% of the global population was living in places where guidelines on air quality were not met, which results in an estimated figure of seven million deaths annually. The new Brazilian air quality standards, CONAMA 491/2018, was the first revision in over two decades and has as final target the WHO guidelines for air quality, although no deadline has been established for implementation. The goal of this work was to quantify public health gains of this new policy based on hospitalizations due to respiratory diseases, the most studied outcome in Brazilian time series studies, in four Brazilian Southeast capitals: São Paulo (SP), Rio de Janeiro (RJ), Belo Horizonte (MG), and Vitória (ES) for PM, PM, SO, CO, and O. Population and hospitalizations data for all respiratory diseases for people under 5 years old, over 64 years old, most vulnerable populations, and all ages were analyzed. The air quality monitoring data was analyzed in two different periods: 2016 to 2018 for São Paulo and Vitória; and between 2015 and 2017 for Belo Horizonte and Rio de Janeiro, according to available monitoring data. A literature review was carried out to determine the appropriate relative risk to be used in the estimations, and the public health gains were calculated based on the selected relative risks for each city. The highest estimate was for São Paulo, with 3454 avoidable respiratory hospital admissions (all ages). In total, the four cities accounted for 4148 avoidable hospitalizations, which was associated to $1.1 million public health gains. Results considering the day of exposure (lag 0) were superior to those with the 5-day moving average (lag 5). The results highlighted the importance of adopting more restrictive standards and called for public policies, the necessity of expanding the air quality monitoring network, mapping emission sources, and improve the knowledge about the interaction between air pollution and health outcomes beyond respiratory disease for the region.
根据世界卫生组织(WHO)的数据,2016 年,全球有 91%的人口生活在空气质量标准不达标的地方,这导致每年估计有 700 万人死亡。新的巴西空气质量标准 CONAMA 491/2018 是二十多年来的首次修订,其最终目标是达到世卫组织的空气质量标准,尽管尚未确定实施的最后期限。这项工作的目的是根据呼吸系统疾病住院人数来量化这一新政策的公共卫生效益,这是巴西时间序列研究中研究最多的结果,在巴西东南部的四个首府:圣保罗(SP)、里约热内卢(RJ)、贝洛奥里藏特(MG)和维多利亚(ES),针对 PM、PM、SO、CO 和 O 进行分析。分析了所有年龄组、5 岁以下和 64 岁以上人群以及最脆弱人群的所有呼吸系统疾病的人口和住院数据。空气质量监测数据在两个不同时期进行了分析:圣保罗和维多利亚在 2016 年至 2018 年;贝洛奥里藏特和里约热内卢在 2015 年至 2017 年,具体取决于可用的监测数据。进行了文献回顾,以确定适当的相对风险用于估计,并根据每个城市选择的相对风险计算公共卫生效益。圣保罗的估计值最高,有 3454 例可避免的呼吸系统疾病住院(所有年龄组)。四个城市总共可避免 4148 例住院,这与 110 万美元的公共卫生效益有关。考虑暴露日(滞后 0)的结果优于 5 天移动平均值(滞后 5)的结果。结果突出了采取更严格标准的重要性,并呼吁采取公共政策,有必要扩大空气质量监测网络,绘制排放源地图,并提高对该地区空气污染与健康结果之间相互作用的认识,超越呼吸系统疾病。