Xue Tao, Geng Guannan, Li Jiajianghui, Han Yiqun, Guo Qian, Kelly Frank J, Wooster Martin J, Wang Huiyu, Jiangtulu Bahabaike, Duan Xiaoli, Wang Bin, Zhu Tong
Institute of Reproductive and Child Health and Key Laboratory of Reproductive Health of the Ministry of Health, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Peking University Health Science Centre, Beijing, China.
School of Environment, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China.
Lancet Planet Health. 2021 Sep;5(9):e588-e598. doi: 10.1016/S2542-5196(21)00153-4.
The prevalence of landscape fires has increased, particularly in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). We aimed to assess the impact of exposure to landscape fire smoke (LFS) on the health of children.
We conducted a sibling-matched case-control study and selected 552 155 children (aged <18 years) from Demographic and Health Surveys in 55 LMICs from 2000 to 2014. Each deceased child was matched with their sibling(s). The exposure indicators were fire-sourced PM and dry-matter emissions. We associated these exposure indicators with child mortality using conditional regressions, and derived an exposure-response function using a non-linear model. Based on the association, we quantified the global burden of fire-attributable child deaths in LMICs from 2000 to 2014.
Each 1 μg/m increment of fire-sourced PM was associated with a 2·31% (95% CI 1·50-3·13) increased risk of child mortality. The association was robust to different models. The exposure-response function was superlinear and suggested per-unit exposure to larger fires was more toxic. Based on our non-linear exposure-response function, we estimated that between 2000 and 2014, the five countries with the largest number of child deaths associated with fire-sourced PM were Nigeria (164 000 [126 000 to 209 000] annual deaths), Democratic Republic of the Congo (126 000 [95% CI 114 000 to 139 000] annual deaths), India (65 900 [-22 200 to 147 000] annual deaths), Uganda (30 200 [24 500 to 36 300] annual deaths), and Indonesia (28 900 [19 100 to 38 400]).
Exposure to landscape fire smoke contributes substantially to the global burden of child mortality.
National Natural Science Foundation of China, Ministry of Science and Technology of China, Peking University, UK National Institute for Health Research Health Protection Research Unit, Leverhulme Center for Wildfires, Environment and Society, and National Environment Research Council National Capability funding to National Centre for Earth Observation and Energy Foundation.
森林火灾的发生率有所上升,尤其是在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)。我们旨在评估接触森林火灾烟雾(LFS)对儿童健康的影响。
我们进行了一项同胞匹配的病例对照研究,从2000年至2014年期间55个低收入和中等收入国家的人口与健康调查中选取了552155名18岁以下儿童。每个死亡儿童与他们的同胞进行匹配。暴露指标是源自火灾的颗粒物和干物质排放。我们使用条件回归将这些暴露指标与儿童死亡率相关联,并使用非线性模型推导暴露-反应函数。基于这种关联,我们量化了2000年至2014年期间低收入和中等收入国家因火灾导致的儿童死亡的全球负担。
源自火灾的颗粒物每增加1μg/m,儿童死亡风险增加2.31%(95%CI 1.50-3.13)。这种关联在不同模型中都很稳健。暴露-反应函数是超线性的,表明每单位暴露于更大规模的火灾毒性更大。基于我们的非线性暴露-反应函数,我们估计在2000年至2014年期间,与源自火灾的颗粒物相关的儿童死亡人数最多的五个国家是尼日利亚(每年164000例[126000至209000例]死亡)、刚果民主共和国(每年126000例[95%CI 114000至139000例]死亡)、印度(每年65900例[-22200至14700例]死亡)、乌干达(每年30200例[24500至36300例]死亡)和印度尼西亚(每年28900例[19100至38400例]死亡)。
接触森林火灾烟雾对全球儿童死亡负担有重大影响。
中国国家自然科学基金、中国科学技术部、北京大学、英国国家卫生研究院健康保护研究单位、利华休姆野火、环境与社会中心以及国家环境研究理事会向国家地球观测中心和能源基金会提供的国家能力资金。