Risk assessment for cardiovascular and respiratory mortality due to air pollution and synoptic meteorology in 10 Canadian cities

Date

2014

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Abstract

Synoptic weather and ambient air quality synergistically influence human health. We report the relative risk of mortality from all non-accidental, respiratory-, and cardiovascular-related causes, associated with exposure to four air pollutants, by weather type and season, in 10 major Canadian cities for 1981 through 1999. We conducted this multi-city time-series study using Poisson generalized linear models stratified by season and each of six distinctive synoptic weather types. Statistically significant relationships of mortality due to short-term exposure to carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide, sulphur dioxide, and ozone were found, with significant modifications of risk by weather type, season, and mortality cause. In total, 61% of the respiratory-related mortality relative risk estimates were significantly higher than for cardiovascular- related mortality. The combined effect of weather and air pollution is greatest when tropical-type weather is present in the spring or summer. © 2013 Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Description

cc-by-nc-sa

Keywords

Air pollution, Cardiovascular, Mortality, Relative risk, Respiratory, Spatial synoptic classification

Citation

Vanos, J.K., Hebbern, C., & Cakmak, S.. 2014. Risk assessment for cardiovascular and respiratory mortality due to air pollution and synoptic meteorology in 10 Canadian cities. Environmental Pollution, 185. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2013.11.007

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