Comparison of hospitalization and mortality associated with short-term exposure to ambient ozone and PM2.5 in Canada

Shin, HH; Gogna, P; Maquiling, A; Parajuli, RP; Haque, L; Burr, B

HERO ID

7504321

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2021

Language

English

PMID

33158503

HERO ID 7504321
In Press No
Year 2021
Title Comparison of hospitalization and mortality associated with short-term exposure to ambient ozone and PM2.5 in Canada
Authors Shin, HH; Gogna, P; Maquiling, A; Parajuli, RP; Haque, L; Burr, B
Journal Chemosphere
Volume 265
Issue Elsevier
Page Numbers 128683
Abstract <strong>BACKGROUND: </strong>Hospitalization and mortality (H-M) have been linked to air pollution separately. However, previous studies have not adequately compared whether air pollution is a stronger risk factor for hospitalization or mortality. This study aimed to investigate differences in H-M risk from short-term ozone and PM2.5 exposures, and determine whether differences are modified by season, age, and sex.<br /><br /><strong>METHODS: </strong>Daily ozone, PM2.5, temperature, and all-cause H-M counts (ICD-10, A00-R99) were collected for 22-24 Canadian cities for up to 29 years. Generalized additive Poisson models were employed to estimate associations between each pollutant and health outcome, which were compared across season (warm, cold, or year-round), age (all ages or seniors > 65), and sex.<br /><br /><strong>RESULTS: </strong>Overall, ozone and PM2.5 showed higher season-specific risk of mortality than hospitalization: warm-season ozone: 0.54% (95% credible interval, 0.20, 0.85) vs. 0.14% (0.02, 0.27) per 10 ppb; and year-round PM2.5: 0.90% (0.33, 1.41) vs. 0.29% (0.03, 0.56) per 10 μg/m3. While age showed little H-M difference, sex appeared to be a modifier of H-M risk. While females had higher mortality risk, males had higher hospitalization risk: for females, ozone 0.87% (0.36, 1.35) vs. -0.03% (-0.18, 0.11) and PM2.5 1.19% (0.40, 1.90) vs. 0.19% (-0.10, 0.47); and for males ozone 0.20% (-0.28, 0.65) vs. 0.35% (0.18, 0.51).<br /><br /><strong>CONCLUSION: </strong>This study found H-M differences attributable to ozone and PM2.5, suggesting that both are stronger risk factors for mortality than hospitalization. In addition, there were clear H-M differences by sex: specifically, females showed higher mortality risk and males showed higher hospitalization risk.
Doi 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.128683
Pmid 33158503
Wosid WOS:000603465000005
Url https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0045653520328812
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Ground-level ozone; hospitalization; mortality; PM2.5; sex-specific difference; short-term exposure