Ju Ke, Lu Liyong, Wang Wen, Chen Ting, Yang Chenyu, Zhang En, Xu Zongyou, Li Shanshan, Song Jiangning, Pan Jay, Guo Yuming
School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Level 2, 553 St Kilda Road, Melbourne, VIC, 3004, Australia.
HEOA Group, West China School of Public Health and West China Fourth Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, 610041, PR China; Institute for Healthy Cities and West China Research Center for Rural Health Development, Sichuan University, Chengdu, 610041, PR China.
Environ Res. 2023 Jan 15;217:114761. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2022.114761. Epub 2022 Nov 11.
Long-term exposure to air pollutants is likely to be associated with mental disorders, but relevant studies remain limited and inconsistent, and evidence to assess causality is particularly lacking, especially in developing countries. In addition, there are few studies on the role of physical activity in this relationship. We investigated the causal relationship between air pollutant exposure and mental health among Chinese adults and whether physical activity could play a positive role in this relationship. Using the balanced panel data for 2014 and 2016 from the China Family Panel Study, a representative Chinese national cohort study, we selected and validated appropriate instrumental variable to explore the causal relationship between air pollution and mental health and explored the moderating effect of physical activity using an instrumental variable fixed effects model (IVFE) in a counterfactual causal inference framework. PM and ground surface ozone were selected as proxies for different types of air pollutants and extended the interpretability by studying them for populations with different characteristics. A total of 21,944 participants were included in this study. In the IVFE model, we found that both PM and ground surface ozone significantly negatively affected mental health, and that habitual physical activity counteracted this negative effect regardless of different types of air pollution. We also found that the findings held for adults with different characteristics. The findings suggest that habitual physical activity may offset the deterioration of mental health in adults in developing countries due to air pollution, regardless of age, gender, income, and the presence of chronic diseases.
长期暴露于空气污染物可能与精神障碍有关,但相关研究仍然有限且不一致,尤其缺乏评估因果关系的证据,在发展中国家更是如此。此外,关于体育活动在这种关系中的作用的研究很少。我们调查了中国成年人中空气污染物暴露与心理健康之间的因果关系,以及体育活动是否能在这种关系中发挥积极作用。利用来自中国家庭追踪调查(一项具有代表性的中国全国性队列研究)的2014年和2016年的平衡面板数据,我们选择并验证了合适的工具变量,以探讨空气污染与心理健康之间的因果关系,并在反事实因果推断框架中使用工具变量固定效应模型(IVFE)探讨体育活动的调节作用。选择颗粒物(PM)和地面臭氧作为不同类型空气污染物的代理指标,并通过对不同特征人群的研究来扩展其可解释性。本研究共纳入21944名参与者。在IVFE模型中,我们发现PM和地面臭氧均对心理健康有显著的负面影响,且无论空气污染类型如何,习惯性体育活动都能抵消这种负面影响。我们还发现,这些结果适用于不同特征的成年人。研究结果表明,无论年龄、性别、收入和是否患有慢性病,习惯性体育活动可能会抵消发展中国家成年人因空气污染导致的心理健康恶化。