![spacer](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20081101212817im_/http://www.ehponline.org/siteimages/transpixel.gif)
| | ![spacer](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20081101212817im_/http://www.ehponline.org/siteimages/transpixel.gif) | | ![spacer](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20081101212817im_/http://www.ehponline.org/siteimages/transpixel.gif) | |
Effect of Air Pollution on Daily Mortality in Hong Kong Chit-Ming Wong, Stefan Ma, Anthony Johnson Hedley, and Tai-Hing Lam Department of Community Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China Abstract In different weather conditions, constituents and concentrations of pollutants, personal exposure, and biologic responses to air pollution may vary. In this study we assessed the effects of four air pollutants on mortality in both cool and warm seasons in Hong Kong, a subtropical city. Daily counts of mortality, due to all nonaccidental causes, and cardiovascular and respiratory diseases were modeled with daily pollutant concentrations [24-hr means for nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, and particulate matter < 10 µm in aerodynamic diameter (PM10) ; 8-hr mean for ozone]. using Poisson regression. We controlled for confounding factors by fitting the terms in models, in line with those recommended by the APHEA (Air Pollution and Health: a European Approach) protocol. Exposure-response relationships in warm and cool seasons were examined using generalized additive modeling. During the cool season, for a linear extrapolation of 10th-90th percentiles in the pollutant concentrations of all oxidant pollutants, NO2, SO2, and O3, we found significant effects on all the mortality outcomes under study, with relative risks (RR) of 1.04-1.10 (p < 0.038, except p = 0.079 for SO2 on respiratory mortality) . We observed consistent positive exposure-response relationships during the cool season but not during the warm season. The effects of PM10 were marginally significant (RR = 1.06 ; p = 0.054) for respiratory mortality but not for the other outcomes (p > 0.135) . In this subtropical city, local air quality objectives should take into account that air pollution has stronger health effects during the cool rather than warm season and that oxidant pollutants are more important indicators of health effects than particulates. Key words: air pollutant concentrations, daily mortality, exposure-response, offset, stratification by seasons. Environ Health Perspect 109:335-340 (2001) . [Online 8 March 2001] http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2001/109p335-340wong/ abstract.html Address correspondence to A.J. Hedley, Department of Community Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, Patrick Manson Building South Wing, 7 Sassoon Road, Hong Kong, China. Telephone: (852) 2819 9282 / 2819 9280. Fax: (852) 2855 9528. E-mail: hrmrajh@hkucc.hku.hk We thank R. Atkinson and R. Anderson for their advice on data analysis ; M. Chi for secretarial support, and P. Chau for data analysis support. Received 12 May 2000 ; accepted 24 October 2000. |
|
|
![spacer](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20081101212817im_/http://www.ehponline.org/siteimages/transpixel.gif) |
Time-series methods are widely used for assessment of short-term health effects of air pollution ( 1). Although limitations arise from ecologic fallacy ( 2) and the harvesting effect ( 3-5), time-series methods are more powerful and better able to characterize the population exposure effects than those based on geographic aggregations in cross-sectional studies ( 6). Also, methods to control for time-related confounding factors are well established ( 7). Daily time-series analysis is not applicable to the estimation of longer-term chronic exposure effects of air pollution ( 8), which are public health concerns. Daily time-series analysis may be better estimated from longitudinal studies, but it can be used to assess the potential health benefits of air quality intervention in terms of the number of hospital admissions and deaths avoidable if days with high concentrations (according to a chosen reference value) were eliminated, thus providing information to support the setting of air quality objectives ( 9,10).
To date, there is coherent evidence that air pollution has short-term effects on mortality (9,11-15), but the questions whether there are independent effects of a single pollutant to account for a health outcome under study and whether there are thresholds and linear or non-linear relationships are still not settled.
In the United States, particulates are regarded as the pollutants that account for most excess mortality due to air pollution (16), but in Europe several studies indicated a stronger association with sulfur dioxide (17). Some showed that it might be the sulfuric acid (18), acid aerosol (19), and mass concentration (20) associated with particulates that are responsible for the effects. Other studies showed that independent effects of individual pollutants cannot be identified in light of the complexity and variability of the air pollution mixtures to which people are exposed (21,22).
In this study we assessed the effects of air pollution on mortality outcomes and identified which pollutants would contribute most to the effect in Hong Kong, a subtropical city in the Asian Pacific rim. Patterns of exposure-response relationships for four criteria pollutants, nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, particulate matter < 10 µm in aerodynamic diameter (PM10), and ozone were assessed during warm and cool seasons with a view to ascertaining their effects on the commonly used mortality outcomes.
Data. For the period 1995-1997, we obtained daily death counts for all nonaccidental causes [International Classification of Diseases, Revision 9 (ICD-9) < 800 (23)], respiratory disease (ICD-9 460-519), and cardiovascular disease (ICD-9 390-459) from the Census & Statistics Department (Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, People's Republic of China); meteorologic data (daily mean temperature and relative humidity) from the Hong Kong Observatory; and air pollutant concentrations (from two to seven monitoring stations) from the Environmental Protection Department. Daily means of 24-hr concentrations of NO2, SO2, and PM10 and 8-hr (900 hr-1700 hr) concentrations of O3 were derived if they were non-missing. Daily concentrations were defined as non-missing if more than 17/24 hr concentrations and more than 5/8 hr concentrations were valid. According to the second phase guidelines of APHEA (Air Pollution and Health: a European Approach), non-missing daily means were first centered for each station i [i.e., individual daily concentrations (Xij) were subtracted by an annual station mean (Xi) for each day j]. The centered data from all centers were then combined and added into the annual mean of all stations (X) to form X´ij =(Xij - Xi + X). The daily (mean) concentrations of individual pollutants were computed for analysis by taking the mean of X´ij over all stations (24).
Statistical methods. We used Poisson regression with daily mortality counts as the dependent variable. To obtain a core model for each of the mortality outcomes for all ages, nonparametric smoothing (by means of the Loess function) terms for trend on days (1-1,096), seasonality, temperature, and humidity; and dummy variables for days of the week, holidays, and influenza epidemics [weeks with number of hospital admissions for influenza (ICD-9 487) in the upper quartile, which was on average over 8/week in 1995, 1996, and 1997, respectively] were fitted as the independent variables. In addition, we also considered the lag effects of temperature and humidity in building the core models. Residuals of each core model were examined to check whether there were discernible patterns and autocorrelation by means of residual plots and partial autocorrelation function plots, respectively (7). If necessary, both overdispersions and autocorrelations were further adjusted for the model using statistical procedures (7) implemented in S-Plus (MathSoft, Inc., Seattle, WA, USA). We paid special attention to ensure that there were no differences in the residuals between warm (April-September) and cool (other months) seasons.
We estimated concentrations of current day up to the previous 5 days for O3 and up to 3 days for other pollutants and identified the best lagged day by a modified version of Akaike's Information Criterion (ACI) (25). The analysis was also performed using the Loess smoothing function to adjust for nonlinear effect of a copollutant. Differences in pollutant effects between seasons were assessed by a season-by-pollutant concentration
interaction term in each model, and the effect estimates for cool and warm seasons were derived from the model with the interaction terms.
To perform the stratified analyses, we first obtained expected mortality counts ( ) from the core model for all seasons. Poisson regression for the mortality outcomes (Y) was then fitted on pollutant concentrations (X) to obtain the log relative risk (ß) estimate with offset on log( ) (26) separately for warm and cool seasons. Offset is a computation
procedure to treat log( ) as a reference value and does not proceed to estimate a parameter for it in the Poisson regression log[E(Y)] = log( ) + + ßx (where is a parameter for the constant term). Exposure-response curves in warm and cool seasons were examined using generalized additive modeling (25).
Summary statistics. Summary statistics of mortality counts, air pollutant concentrations, and meteorologic measurements are presented in Table 1. There were more deaths, higher concentrations of pollutants (except for SO2, which was about the same), and drier weather conditions in the cool season than in the warm season.
Lag effects. In whole-year analysis, NO2, SO2, and PM10 showed similar patterns for their effects on all the mortality outcomes in that the relative risks (RRs) increased from lag-day 0, were maximal at either lag-day 1 or lag-day 2, and declined to the lowest at lag-day 3. The RRs at the best lagged day (i.e., the day with minimum AIC) were significant in all three categories of deaths (p < 0.01) for NO2 and SO2, and was significant (p = 0.024) only for respiratory mortality for PM10. For O3, the RRs were not significant (p > 0.05) for any of the lagged days or for any mortality outcomes. With adjustment for autocorrelation, there was little change in the RRs and p-values. However, with adjustment for a copollutant, only the RR for NO2 in cardiovascular mortality (p = 0.046) and for SO2 in nonaccidental (p = 0.003) and cardiovascular (p = 0.023) mortality remained significant (Table 2).
Effects by seasons. During the warm season, there were no significant effects (p > 0.1) for all pollutants for all mortality outcomes (Table 3). During the cool season, without adjustment for copollutants, a) all of the RRs at the best lagged days were significantly greater than unity in all the mortality outcomes (p < 0.015) for NO2; b) they were significant in nonaccidental and cardiovascular mortality (p < 0.002) for SO2; c) they were marginally significant in respiratory mortality (p = 0.054) for PM10; and d) they were all significant (p < 0.038) for O3. During the cool season with adjustment for copollutants, only the effects of NO2 on cardiovascular mortality, SO2 on nonaccident and cardiovascular mortality, and O3 on nonaccident and respiratory mortality remained significant (p < 0.05). However, the between-season differences were statistically significant for NO2 in cardiovascular mortality with and without adjustment for copollutants (p < 0.039) and for O3 in all mortality outcomes (p < 0.044) without adjustment and in nonaccident and respiratory mortality (p < 0.032) with adjustment for copollutant.
Seasonal exposure-response relationships. Figures 1-4 show the exposure-response relationships for each pollutant for the three mortality outcomes at the best lagged day.
Figure 1. Smoothed plots of NO2 against mortality risk in log scale (deviated from overall mean) at the best lagged day.
Figure 2. Smoothed plots of SO2 against mortality risk in log scale (deviated from overall mean) at the best lagged day.
Figure 3. Smoothed plots of PM10 against mortality risk in log scale (deviated from overall mean) at the best lagged day.
Figure 4. Smoothed plots of O3 against mortality risk in log scale (deviated from overall mean) at the best lagged day.
NO2. During the warm season, we observed no clear exposure-response relationships for the three outcomes for NO2. However, during the cool season there were observable linear exposure-response relationships throughout the concentration levels in nonaccidental mortality, but the curves showed positive and nonlinear relationships at concentrations higher than 80 µg/m3 in the other two outcomes.
SO2. During the warm season, no exposure-response relationships were observed when SO2 was < 30 µg/m3, but there were some linear or nonlinear relationships above that concentration. During the cool season, we observed positive exposure-response relationships for concentrations of 0-40 µg/m3 SO2.
PM10. For PM10, no clear exposure-
response relationships were observed for the three outcomes in warm seasons, but in the cool season there was a positive exposure-
response relationship for respiratory mortality for concentrations up to 80 µg/m3.
O3. There were no clear relationships for any of the three outcomes for O3 during the warm season. However, during the cool season all of the mortality outcomes tended to increase with increasing concentrations.
All pollutant levels are high in Hong Kong. Although SO2 has been reduced substantially due to government limits on the sulfur content of fuels in the early 1990s (27), the level of SO2 in Hong Kong still ranks in the middle among more than 30 metropolitan cities in the world. The SO2 level in Hong Kong is higher than those in Berlin, Germany; Boston, Massachusetts (USA); Brisbane, Australia; Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; London, United Kingdom; and Paris, France (28).
The levels of NO2 and O3 have been increasing along with increasing vehicular traffic volume. Levels of PM10, which is primarily related to the use of diesel engines, in Hong Kong are among the highest in the world: they are only lower than those in the most polluted cities such as Barcelona, Spain; Guangzhou, China; Manila, Republic of the Philippines; Mexico City, Mexico; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (USA); Santiago, Chile; Shanghai, China; and Taipei, Taiwan.
In the present study the estimated effects of the pollutants on mortality reached a maximum at a lag of 1-2 days. These observations are consistent with those reported by Bremner et al. (29) in London: the effects increased from lag-day 0 to a maximum at lag-day 1 for NO2, SO2, and PM10.
A major finding of this study is that O3 had effects on all three mortality outcomes during the cool season, and the effects were greater than those in the warm season; this is unlike several other reports in which the effects were found in the warm season (9,12,29). This is consistent with our previous report on the effects of pollution on hospital admissions due to heart failure in subjects 65 years of age (30). The effects of the other oxidant pollutants (NO2 and SO2) were also significant for all of the mortality outcomes in the cool season but not in the warm season. In Athens, Greece, effects of SO2 on all causes of nonaccidental mortality were also observed in the cool season (31), but in London, the effects for NO2 and SO2 were observed in the warm season (12). When the data from five western European cities and four central European cities were combined, SO2 also showed slightly stronger effects during the warm season than during the cool season (32).
In Hong Kong in the cool season, air pollutant levels were higher (NO2, 64 vs. 48; PM10, 62 vs. 42; O3, 35 vs. 32 µg/m3) than those in the warm season, except SO2, which was slightly lower (17 vs. 18). Because pollutants were correlated (r = 0.54-0.72 between NO2, SO2, and PM10 during the cool season), greater effects observed during cool weather may be due to other pollutants that were also at higher levels during the cool season. The cool season in Hong Kong is drier (humidity 75% vs. 81%), less cloudy (63% vs. 72%), and less variable, so people are more likely to go outdoors and open the windows, thus being exposed to higher levels of air pollution. In contrast, during the warm season (temperatures of 25°C-30°C and humidity of 73%-91% between 10th to 90th percentiles) people usually use air-conditioning, thus reducing the risks of outdoor ambient air pollution exposure.
Another major finding in this study is the positive exposure-response relationships for NO2 and SO2 and all the outcomes during the cool season. There were no thresholds, and the effects showed an inverted "J" shape at higher concentrations. At very high concentrations, the risks of mortality could be reduced possibly because vulnerable subjects may have died before the concentration had reached the maximum levels (4). During the warm season, we observed no consistent
positive or negative relationships for all the pollutants. In Hong Kong, there are greater variations in weather conditions in the warm season, when heavy rain, rain storms, and typhoons are common. These factors, in addition to the frequent use of air-conditioning, would prevent the actual exposure-response relationships between air pollution and mortality from being readily observable.
In the absence of an observed linear exposure-response relationship, generalized additive modelling (GAM) could be used to examine whether there are any other forms of relationships. Instead of obtaining a single parameter for the effect, GAM is fitted to obtain a parameter at each point of the independent variable after applying some smoothing function to the data. The fitted values (presented as deviation from an overall mean), along with values of the independent variable, produce an exposure-response plot. It is useful, as demonstrated in this study, in the interpretation of results of daily time-series studies for health effects of air pollution.
Morris and Naumova (33) reported synergistic effects of carbon monoxide and lower temperatures on hospital admissions due to congestive heart failure in Chicago, Illinois (USA). Both CO and cold temperature can increase the load on the heart and thus increase the effect on cardiovascular morbidity (33). For other pollutants, including SO2, the production of synergistic effects was biologically plausible, as both lower temperatures and high air pollutant concentrations were related to increased blood viscosity. Changes in blood rheology may be caused by an inflammatory process in the lung induced by air pollution or by thermoregulatory adjustment to mild surface cooling in cold weather (34,35). This study in Hong Kong is the first to show that all of the oxidant pollutants under study increased effects (p < 0.07) on cardiovascular mortality in the cool season. It is also the first study to demonstrate the relationship between pollutant concentration and mortality stratified by cool and warm seasons, on the basis of statistical models with offset on expected counts from the same core model, thus ensuring comparability in the effect estimates between the two seasons. Overall, during the cool season there was a 5-10% (p < 0.038) increase in nonaccidental and cardiovascular mortality; this results in an increase from the 10th to the 90th percentile (from linear extrapolation) for each of the oxidant pollutants under study. The nonsignificant relative risk estimate for SO2 on respiratory disease may be due to the small change in concentration from the warm season to the cool season. In a sensitivity analysis using the method with offset on expected counts, the estimated increases were consistent but lower, with increases of 2-7% (p < 0.046) (data not shown). The larger p-values may be due to lower power in stratified analysis when the sample size was halved.
Except for respiratory mortality, no strong effects of particulate pollutants were observed in Hong Kong, unlike in other places, although the levels were high. This should be investigated further. The difference may arise from the use of a time-series study, in that the magnitude of the effect estimates depends on the day-to-day covariation of the daily health outcomes and pollutant concentrations instead of the absolute levels of the pollutant concentrations. However, PM10 was found to have a significant effect on respiratory mortality (RR = 1.05; p = 0.028) in both seasons combined, but the effects remain approximately the same (RR = 1.05-1.06) although nonsignificant (p > 0.054) in the by-season estimates. The importance of PM10 should not be diminished by this finding. NO2 is important because of increasing volumes of vehicular traffic on the roads. SO2 continues to have a strong effect, even though the concentrations have decreased and have been maintained at low levels. The formation of O3 in the ambient air depends on a series of complicated photochemical reactions of oxygen, nitrogen oxides, and reactive hydrocarbons in the presence of sunlight. O3 had been increasing until recently, and it is difficult and costly to control as a regional pollutant. However, for most of the pollutants, the effects were nonsignificant after adjusting for a copollutant; this may arise from a problem of multicollinearity, except for NO2 in cardiovascular mortality and SO2 in both nonaccidental and cardiovascular mortality. These observations, together with strong positive exposure-response relationships for NO2 and SO2, suggested that NO2 and SO2 have independent effects and may be better indicators of effects on mortality in this subtropical city. For O3 all of the RR estimates were not significantly greater than unity; the RR estimates were insensitive to adjustment either for autocorrelation or copollutant (Tables 2 and 3) and were insensitive to the use of maximum, minimum, or mean temperature in the model (data not shown).
In setting air pollution control policy from a public health viewpoint, it is important to identify the health effects of air pollutants from local data. Because of the lack of data, there are few studies based on daily hospital admissions and mortality in the Asian Pacific region. For hospital admissions, there has been only one study in Australia (36) and two in Hong Kong (30,37). For mortality studies, there have been one in Beijing, China (38) based on 1-year daily data, two in Australia (36,39), and two in Korea (40,41). Our report should contribute to the understanding of the effects of air pollutants in this region and may clarify the differences in effects and mechanisms between Western and Eastern populations.
Local data on health effects of air pollution are required for setting standards and objectives for air pollution controls. When local data are not available, foreign data may be helpful, but they may not be relevant or applicable because of a difference in climate or other conditions. Our findings in this study provide information to support a review of air quality objectives with consideration of their effects on health (10).
|
|
![spacer](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20081101212817im_/http://www.ehponline.org/siteimages/transpixel.gif) |
[References Listed in PubMed]
References and Notes
1. Thurston GD. A critical review of PM10 mortality time-series studies. J Expo Anal Environ Epidemiol 6:3-21 (1996).
2. Morgenstern H. Use of ecologic analysis in epidemiologic research. Am J Public Health 139:1336-1344 (1982).
3. Schimmel H, Murawski TJ. Evidence for possible acute health effects of ambient air pollution from time series analysis: methodological questions and some new results based on New York City daily mortality 1963-1976. Bull NY Acad Med 54:1052-1058 (1978).
4. Spix C. Daily time series of mortality counts: estimating the harvesting effect. Stat Med (in press).
5. Zeger SL, Dominici F, Samet J. Harvesting-resistant estimates of air pollution effects on mortality. Epidemiology 10:171-175 (1999).
6. Rossi G, Zanobetti A, Marchi M. Time series analysis in environmental epidemiology: short-term effects of air pollution on mortality and morbidity. Epidemiol Prev 19:90-98 (1995).
7. Schwartz J, Spix C, Touloumi G, Bacharova L, Barumamdzadeh T, le Tertre A, Piekarksi T, Ponce de Leon A, Ponka A, Rossi G, et al. Methodological issues in studies of air pollution and daily counts of deaths or hospital admissions. J Epidemiol Community Health 50(suppl 1):S3-S11 (1996).
8. McMichael AJ, Anderson HR, Brunekreef B, Cohen AJ. Inappropriate use of daily mortality analyses to estimate long-term mortality effects of air pollution. Int J Epidemiol 27:450-453 (1998).
9. Ostro B, Sanchez JM, Aranda C, Eskeland GS. Air pollution and mortality: results from a study of Santiago, Chile. J Expo Anal Environ Epidemiol 6:97-114 (1996).
10. Hedley AJ, Wong CM, Wong TW, Tam CM, Yu ITS, Tam E. Health Effects of Air Pollution. Report from the Sub-Working Group on the Review of Hong Kong's Air Quality Objectives. Hong Kong:Environmental Protection Department, Hong Kong Government, 1999.
11. Kinney PL, Ozkaynak H. Associations of daily mortality and air pollution in Los Angeles County. Environ Res 54:99-120 (1991).
12. Anderson HR, Ponce de Leon A, Bland JM, Bower JS, Strachan DP. Air pollution and daily mortality in London: 1987-92. Br Med J 312:665-669 (1996).
13. Sunyer J, Castellsagué J, Sáez M, Tobias A, Anto JM. Air pollution and mortality in Barcelona. J Epidemiol Community Health 50(suppl 1):S76-80 (1996).
14. Wietlisbach V, Pope CA, Ackermann-Liebrich U. Air pollution and daily mortality in three Swiss urban areas. Soz Praventivmed 41:107-115 (1996).
15. Touloumi G, Katsouyanni K, Zmirou D, Schwartz J, Spix C, Ponce de Leon A, Tobias A, Quennel P, Rabczenko D, Bacharova L, et al. Short-term effects of ambient oxidant exposure on mortality: a combined analysis within the APHEA project. Am J Epidemiol 146:177-185 (1997).
16. Schwartz J. Air pollution and daily mortality: a review and meta-analysis. Environ Rev 64:36-52 (1994).
17. Katsouyanni K, Touloumi G, Spix C, Schwartz J, Balducci F, Medina S, Rossi G, Wojtyniak B, Sunyer J, Bacharova L, et al. Short term effects of ambient sulphur dioxide and particulate matter on mortality in 12 European cities: results from time series data from the APHEA project. Air Pollution and Health: a European Approach. Br Med J 314:1658-1663 (1997).
18. Dockery DW, Pope AC III, Xu X, Spengler JD, Ware JH, Fay ME, Ferris BG Jr, Speizer FE. An association between air pollution and mortality in six US cities. N Engl J Med 329:1753-1759 (1993).
19. Thurston GD, Ito K, Lippmann M, Hayes C. Re-examination of London, England, mortality in relation to exposure to acidic aerosols during 1963-1972 winters. Environ Health Perspect 79:73-82 (1989).
20. Dockery DW, Schwartz J, Spengler JD. Air pollution and daily mortality: associations with particulates and acid aerosols. Environ Res 59:362-373 (1992).
21. Ito K, Thurston GD, Hayes C, Lippmann M. Associations of London, England, daily mortality with particulate matters, sulphur dioxide and acidic aerosol pollution. Arch Environ Health 48:213-220 (1993).
22. Borja-Aburto VH, Loomis DP, Bangdiwala SI, Shy CM, Rascon-Pacheco RA. Ozone, suspended particulates and daily mortality in Mexico City. Am J Epidemiol 145:258-268 (1997).
23. WHO. International Classification of Diseases, 1975 Revision. Geneva:World Health Organization, 1977.
24. Atkinson R. Personal communication.
25. Hastie TJ, Tibshirani RJ. Generalized Additive Models. London:Chapman and Hall, 1990.
26. Breslow NE, Day NR. Statistical Methods in Cancer Research, Vol II. The Design and Analysis of Cohort Studies. IARC Sci Publ 82:151-152 (1987).
27. Planning, Environment and Lands Bureau. Clean Air for Hong Kong. Hong Kong:Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government, 1999. Available: http://www.pelb.gov.hk/cleanair/index.htm [cited February 2001].
28. Kiely P, Yap D, DeBrou GD, Fraser D, Dong W, Brown A. A Comparative Study of Toronto's and Selected World Cities. Presented at the 90th Air and Waste Management Association, Toronto, Ontario, June 1997.
29. Bremner SA, Anderson HR, Atkinson RW, McMichael AJ, Strachan DP, Bland JM, Bower-JS. Short term associations between outdoor air pollution and mortality in London 1992-94. Occup Environ Med 56:237-244 (1999).
30. Wong CM, Ma S, Hedley AJ, Lam TH. Does ozone have any effect on daily hospital admissions for circulatory diseases? J Epidemiol Community Health 53:580-581 (1999).
31. Touloumi G, Samoli E, Katsouyanni K. Daily mortality and air pollution from particulate matter, sulphur dioxide, and carbon monoxide in Athens, Greece, 1987-91. A time-series analysis within the APHEA project. J Epidemiol Community Health 50 (suppl 1):S47-S51 (1996).
32. Zmirou D, Schwartz J, Saez M, Zanobetti A, Wojtyniak B, Touloumi G, Spix C, Ponce de Leon A, Le Moullec Y, Bacharova L, et al. Time-series analysis of air pollution and cause-specific mortality. Epidemiology 9:495-503 (1998).
33. Morris RD, Naumova EN. Carbon monoxide and hospital admissions for congestive heart failure: evidence of an increased effect at low temperatures. Environ Health Perspect 106:649-653 (1998).
34. Peters A, Doring A, Wichmann HE, Koenig W. Increased plasma viscosity during an air pollution episode: a link to mortality? Lancet 349:1582-1587 (1997).
35. Keatinge WR, Coleshaw SRK, Cotter F, Mattock M, Murphy M, Chelliah R. Increases in platelet and red cell counts, blood viscosity, and arterial pressure during mild surface cooling: factors in mortality from coronary and cerebral thrombosis in winter. Br Med J 289:1405-1408 (1984).
36. Morgan G, Corbett S, Wlodarczyk J, Lewis P. Air pollution and daily mortality in Sydney, Australia, 1989 through 1993. Am J Public Health 88:759-764 (1998).
37. Wong TW, Lau TS, Yu TS, Neller A, Wong SL, Tam W, Pang SW. Air pollution and hospital admissions for respiratory and cardiovascular diseases in Hong Kong. Occup Environ Med 56:679-683 (1999).
38. Xu X, Gao J, Dockery DW, Chen Y. Air pollution and daily mortality in residential areas of Beijing, China. Arch Environ Health 49:216-222 (1994).
39. Simpson RW, Williams G, Petroeschevsky A, Morgan G, Rutherford S. Associations between outdoor air pollution and daily mortality in Brisbane, Australia. Arch Environ Health 52:442-454 (1997).
40. Lee J-T, Shin D, Chung Y. Air pollution and daily mortality in Seoul and Ulsan, Korea. Environ Health Perspect 107:149-154 (1999).
41. Hong Y-C, Leem J-H, Ha E-H, Christiani DC. PM10 exposure, gaseous pollutants, and daily mortality in Inchon, South Korea. Environ Health Perspect 107:873-878 (1999).
Last Updated: March 8, 2001
|
|
![spacer](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20081101212817im_/http://www.ehponline.org/siteimages/transpixel.gif) |
|
| |