The gains in life expectancy by ambient PM2.5 pollution reductions in localities in Nigeria

Etchie, TO; Etchie, AT; Adewuyi, GO; Pillarisetti, A; Sivanesan, S; Krishnamurthi, K; Arora, NK

HERO ID

6779832

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2018

Language

English

PMID

29414335

HERO ID 6779832
In Press No
Year 2018
Title The gains in life expectancy by ambient PM2.5 pollution reductions in localities in Nigeria
Authors Etchie, TO; Etchie, AT; Adewuyi, GO; Pillarisetti, A; Sivanesan, S; Krishnamurthi, K; Arora, NK
Journal Environmental Pollution
Volume 236
Page Numbers 146-157
Abstract Global burden of disease estimates reveal that people in Nigeria are living shorter lifespan than the regional or global average life expectancy. Ambient air pollution is a top risk factor responsible for the reduced longevity. But, the magnitude of the loss or the gains in longevity accruing from the pollution reductions, which are capable of driving mitigation interventions in Nigeria, remain unknown. Thus, we estimate the loss, and the gains in longevity resulting from ambient PM2.5 pollution reductions at the local sub-national level using life table approach. Surface average PM2.5 concentration datasets covering Nigeria with spatial resolution of ∼1 km were obtained from the global gridded concentration fields, and combined with ∼1 km gridded population of the world (GPWv4), and global administrative unit layers (GAUL) for territorial boundaries classification. We estimate the loss or gains in longevity using population-weighted average pollution level and baseline mortality data for cardiopulmonary disease and lung cancer in adults ≥25 years and for respiratory infection in children under 5. As at 2015, there are six "highly polluted", thirty "polluted" and one "moderately polluted" States in Nigeria. People residing in these States lose ∼3.8-4.0, 3.0-3.6 and 2.7 years of life expectancy, respectively, due to the pollution exposure. But, assuming interventions achieve global air quality guideline of 10 μg/m3, longevity would increase by 2.6-2.9, 1.9-2.5 and 1.6 years for people in the State-categories, respectively. The longevity gains are indeed high, but to achieve them, mitigation interventions should target emission sources having the highest population exposures.
Doi 10.1016/j.envpol.2018.01.034
Pmid 29414335
Wosid WOS:000429187500016
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Longevity; Disability adjusted-life years (DALYs); Aging; Hazard and survival analyses; Disease burden