A study of the association between daily mortality and ambient air pollutant concentrations in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

被引:34
作者
Chock, DP [1 ]
Winkler, SL [1 ]
机构
[1] Ford Motor Co, Res Lab, Environm Modeling Grp, Dearborn, MI 48121 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF THE AIR & WASTE MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION | 2000年 / 50卷 / 08期
关键词
D O I
10.1080/10473289.2000.10464170
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
We have studied the possible association of daily mortality with ambient pollutant concentrations (PM10, CO, O-3, SO2, NO2, and fine [PM2.5] and coarse PM) and weather variables (temperature and dew point) in the Pittsburgh, PA, area for two age groups-less than 75, and 75 and over-for the 3-year period of 1989-1991. Correlation functions among pollutant concentrations show important seasonal dependence, and this fact necessitates the use of seasonal models to better identify the link between ambient pollutant concentrations and daily mortality. An analysis of the seasonal model results for the younger-age group reveals significant multicollinearity problems among the highly correlated concentrations of PM10, CO, and NO2 (and O-3 in spring and summer), and calls into question the rather consistent results of the single- and multi-pollutant non-seasonal models that show a significant positive association between PM10 and daily mortality. For the older-age group, dew point consistently shows a significant association with daily mortality in all models. Collinearity problems appear in the multi-pollutant seasonal and non-seasonal models such that a significant, positive PM10 coefficient is accompanied by a significant, negative coefficient of another ambient pollutant, and the identity of this other pollutant changes with season. The PM2.5 data set is half that of PM10. Identical-model runs for both data sets reveal instability in the pollutant coefficients, especially for the younger age group. The concern for the instability of the pollutant coefficients due to a small signal-to-noise ratio makes it impossible to ascertain credibly the relative associations of the fine- and coarse-particle modes with daily mortality. In this connection, we call for caution in the interpretation of model results for causal inference when the models use fully or partially estimated PM values to fill large data gaps.
引用
收藏
页码:1481 / 1500
页数:20
相关论文
共 13 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], PARTICULATE AIR POLL
[2]   A simulation study of confounding in generalized linear models for air pollution epidemiology [J].
Chen, C ;
Chock, DP ;
Winkler, SL .
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES, 1999, 107 (03) :217-222
[3]  
DAVIS JM, 1996, 55 NAT I STAT SCI
[4]   AIR-POLLUTION AND DAILY MORTALITY IN PHILADELPHIA [J].
MOOLGAVKAR, SH ;
LUEBECK, EG ;
HALL, TA ;
ANDERSON, EL .
EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1995, 6 (05) :476-484
[5]   PARTICULATE AIR-POLLUTION, SULFUR-DIOXIDE, AND DAILY MORTALITY - A REANALYSIS OF THE STEUBENVILLE DATA [J].
MOOLGAVKAR, SH ;
LUEBECK, EG ;
HALL, TA ;
ANDERSON, EL .
INHALATION TOXICOLOGY, 1995, 7 (01) :35-44
[6]   A critical review of the evidence on particulate air pollution and mortality [J].
Moolgavkar, SH ;
Luebeck, EG .
EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1996, 7 (04) :420-428
[7]  
SAMET JM, 1997, PARTICULATE AIR POLL
[8]   Is daily mortality associated specifically with fine particles? [J].
Schwartz, J ;
Dockery, DW ;
Neas, LM .
JOURNAL OF THE AIR & WASTE MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION, 1996, 46 (10) :927-939
[9]   PARTICULATE AIR-POLLUTION AND DAILY MORTALITY IN STEUBENVILLE, OHIO [J].
SCHWARTZ, J ;
DOCKERY, DW .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1992, 135 (01) :12-19
[10]   INCREASED MORTALITY IN PHILADELPHIA ASSOCIATED WITH DAILY AIR-POLLUTION CONCENTRATIONS [J].
SCHWARTZ, J ;
DOCKERY, DW .
AMERICAN REVIEW OF RESPIRATORY DISEASE, 1992, 145 (03) :600-604