Center for Environment and Public Health Studies, School of Public Policy and Government, Fundação Getúlio Vargas, Brasília, Distrito Federal, Brazil.
Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine, University of Bern, Oeschger Center for Climate Change Research, Bern, Switzerland.
Environ Pollut. 2024 Jan 1;340(Pt 2):122797. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2023.122797. Epub 2023 Oct 23.
This is the first study to examine the association between ambient air pollution (PM, O, and NO) and mortality (in different population groups by sex and age) based on a nationwide death record across Brazil over a 15-year period (2003-2017). We used a time-series analytic approach with a distributed lag model. Our study population includes 2,872,084 records of deaths in Brazil between 2003 and 2017. Men accounted for a higher proportion of deaths, with 58% for all-cause mortality, 54% for respiratory mortality, and 52% for circulatory mortality. Most individuals were over 65 years of age. Our results suggest an association between air pollution and mortality in Brazil. The direction, statistical significance, and effect size of these associations varied considerably by type of air pollutant, region, and population group (sex and age group). In particular, the older population group (>65 years) was most affected. The national meta-analysis for the entire data set (without stratification by sex and age) showed that for every 10 μg/m increase in PM concentration, the risk of death from respiratory diseases increased by 2.93% (95%CI: 1.42; 4.43). For every 10 ppb increase in O, there is a 2.21% (95%CI: 0.59; 3.83) increase in the risk of all-cause mortality for the group of all people between 46 and 65 years old, and a 3.53% (95%CI: 0.34; 6.72) increase in the risk of circulatory mortality for the group of women, all ages. For every 10 ppb increase in NO, the risk of respiratory mortality increases by 17.56% (95%CI: 4.44; 30.64) and the risk of all-cause mortality by 5.63% (95%CI: 1.83; 9.44). The results of our study provide epidemiological evidence that air pollution is associated with a higher risk of cardiorespiratory mortality in Brazil. Given the lack of nationwide studies on air pollution in Brazil, our research is an important contribution to the local and international literature that can provide better support to policymakers to improve air quality and public health.
这是第一项基于巴西全国范围内 15 年(2003-2017 年)死亡记录,研究大气污染(PM、O 和 NO)与死亡率(按性别和年龄划分的不同人群)之间关联的研究。我们采用时间序列分析方法和分布滞后模型。我们的研究人群包括 2003 年至 2017 年期间巴西的 2872084 例死亡记录。男性在所有死亡原因中占比更高,占所有原因死亡率的 58%,呼吸系统死亡率的 54%,循环系统死亡率的 52%。大多数人年龄超过 65 岁。我们的研究结果表明,大气污染与巴西的死亡率之间存在关联。这些关联的方向、统计学意义和效应大小因污染物类型、地区和人群(性别和年龄组)而异。特别是,老年人群组(>65 岁)受影响最大。对整个数据集(不分性别和年龄分层)进行的全国荟萃分析显示,每增加 10μg/m 的 PM 浓度,呼吸系统疾病死亡风险增加 2.93%(95%CI:1.42;4.43)。对于每增加 10ppb 的 O,46-65 岁人群的全因死亡率风险增加 2.21%(95%CI:0.59;3.83),所有年龄段女性的循环系统死亡率风险增加 3.53%(95%CI:0.34;6.72)。每增加 10ppb 的 NO,呼吸系统死亡率风险增加 17.56%(95%CI:4.44;30.64),全因死亡率风险增加 5.63%(95%CI:1.83;9.44)。我们的研究结果提供了流行病学证据,表明大气污染与巴西心肺呼吸死亡率升高有关。考虑到巴西缺乏全国性的大气污染研究,我们的研究为当地和国际文献做出了重要贡献,为改善空气质量和公共健康的政策制定者提供了更好的支持。