Centre for Chronic Disease Control, New Delhi, Delhi, India
Department of Environmental Health, Harvard University T H Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
BMJ Open. 2024 Nov 1;14(10):e087445. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-087445.
Air pollution presents a major public health threat to India, affecting more than three quarters of the country's population. In the current project, GEOHealth Health Effects of Selected Environmental Exposomes Across the Life CourSe-India, we aim to study the effect of environmental exposomes-fine particulate matter (PM), nitrogen dioxide (NO), ozone (O) and extremes of temperature-on multiple health outcomes using a modified life course approach. The associated training grant aims to build capacity in India to address the unique environmental health problems.
The project aims to (A) Develop exposure assessments in seven cities, namely Delhi, Chennai, Sonipat, Vizag, Pune, Hyderabad and Bikaner, for: (1) A fine-scale spatiotemporal model for multiple pollutants (PM, NO, O temperature); (2) Combined ground monitoring and modelling for major chemical species of ambient PM at seven cities; and (3) Personal exposure assessment in a subsample from the six cities, except Pune, and (B) Conduct health association studies covering a range of chronic non-communicable diseases and their risk factors leveraging a unique approach using interdigitating cohorts. We have assembled existing pregnancy, child, adolescent, adult and older adult cohorts across India to explore health effects of exposomes using causal analyses. We propose to use Bayesian kernel machine regression to assess the effects of mixtures of all pollutants including species of PM on health while accounting for potential non-linearities and interactions between exposures. This builds on earlier work that constructed a fine spatiotemporal model for PM exposure to study health outcomes in two Indian cities.
Ethical clearance for conduct of the study was obtained from the Institutional Ethics Committee (IEC) of the Centre for Chronic Disease Control, and all the participating institutes and organisations. National-level permission was provided by the Indian Council of Medical Research. The research findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications, policy briefs, print and social media, and communicating with the participating communities and stakeholders. Training of Indian scientists will build the capacity to undertake research on selected adverse environmental exposures on population health in India.
空气污染对印度构成了重大公共卫生威胁,影响了该国超过四分之三的人口。在当前的项目“GEOHealth 特定环境暴露组对全生命周期健康的影响-印度”中,我们旨在使用改良的全生命周期方法研究环境暴露组(细颗粒物 (PM)、二氧化氮 (NO)、臭氧 (O) 和极端温度)对多种健康结果的影响。相关培训赠款旨在增强印度解决独特环境健康问题的能力。
该项目旨在:(A) 在七个城市(德里、钦奈、索尼帕特、维扎格、浦那、海德拉巴和比卡内尔)开发暴露评估,用于:(1) 用于多种污染物(PM、NO、O、温度)的细粒度时空模型;(2) 七个城市大气 PM 主要化学物质的综合地面监测和建模;(3) 除浦那外,六个城市中的一个子样本进行个人暴露评估;(B) 利用交错队列的独特方法,开展涵盖一系列慢性非传染性疾病及其风险因素的健康关联研究。我们已经在印度各地组建了现有的妊娠、儿童、青少年、成年和老年队列,以利用因果分析探索暴露组对健康的影响。我们建议使用贝叶斯核机器回归来评估所有污染物(包括 PM 物质)混合物对健康的影响,同时考虑到暴露之间潜在的非线性和相互作用。这是基于早期构建 PM 暴露精细时空模型的工作,以研究两个印度城市的健康结果。
该研究的进行获得了印度慢性病控制中心机构伦理委员会(IEC)和所有参与的机构和组织的伦理批准。印度医学研究理事会提供了国家一级的许可。研究结果将通过同行评审出版物、政策简报、印刷和社交媒体以及与参与社区和利益相关者的沟通进行传播。对印度科学家的培训将建立在印度开展关于人口健康的特定不利环境暴露研究的能力。