Joint effect of heat and air pollution on mortality in 620 cities of 36 countries
Stafoggia, M.; Michelozzi, P.; Schneider, A.; Armstrong, B.; Scortichini, M.; Rai, M.; Achilleos, S.; Alahmad, B.; Analitis, A.; Åström, C.; Bell, M.L.; Calleja, N.; Krage Carlsen, H.; Carrasco, G.; Paul Cauchi, J.; DSZS Coelho, M.; Correa, P.M.; Diaz, M.H.; Entezari, A.; Forsberg, B.; Garland, R.M.; Leon Guo, Y.; Guo, Y.; Hashizume, M.; Holobaca, I.H.; Íñiguez, C.; Jaakkola, J.J.K.; Kan, H.; Katsouyanni, K.; Kim, H.; Kyselý, J.; Lavigne, E.; Lee, W.; Li, S.; Maasikmets, M.; Madureira, J.; Mayvaneh, F.; Fook Sheng Ng, C.; Nunes, B.; Orru, H.; V Ortega, N.; Osorio, S.; Palomares, A.D.L.; Pan, S.-C.; Pascal, M.; Ragettli, M.S.; Rao, S.; Raz, R.; Royé, Dominic; Ryti, N.; HN Saldiva, P.; Samoli, E.; Schwartz, J.; Scovronick, N.; Sera, F.; Tobias, A.; Tong, S.; DLC Valencia, C.; Maria Vicedo-Cabrera, A.; Urban, A.; Gasparrini, A.; Breitner, S.; de' Donato, F.K.

Identifiers
Identifiers
Date issued
2023Journal title
Environment International
Type of content
Artigo
MeSH
Cities | Hot Temperature | Nitrogen Dioxide | Air Pollution | Air Pollutants | Particulate Matter | Environmental ExposureAbstract
Background: The epidemiological evidence on the interaction between heat and ambient air pollution on mortality is still inconsistent. Objectives: To investigate the interaction between heat and ambient air pollution on daily mortality in a large dataset of 620 cities from 36 countries. Methods: We used daily data on all-cause mortality, air temperature, particulate matter ? 10 ?m (PM10), PM ? 2.5 ?m (PM2.5), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), and ozone (O3) from 620 cities in 36 countries in the period 1995-2020. We restricted the analysis to the six consecutive warmest months in each city. City-specific data were analysed with over-dispersed Poisson regression models, followed by a multilevel random-effects meta-analysis. The joint association between air temperature and air pollutants was modelled with product terms between non-linear functions for air temperature and linear functions for air pollutants. Results: We analyzed 22,630,598 deaths. An increase in mean temperature from the 75th to the 99th percentile of city-specific distributions was associated with an average 8.9 % (95 % confidence interval: 7.1 %, 10.7 %) mortality increment, ranging between 5.3 % (3.8 %, 6.9 %) and 12.8 % (8.7 %, 17.0 %), when daily PM10 was equal to 10 or 90 ?g/m3, respectively. Corresponding estimates when daily O3 concentrations were 40 or 160 ?g/m3 were 2.9 % (1.1 %, 4.7 %) and 12.5 % (6.9 %, 18.5 %), respectively. Similarly, a 10 ?g/m3 increment in PM10 was associated with a 0.54 % (0.10 %, 0.98 %) and 1.21 % (0.69 %, 1.72 %) increase in mortality when daily air temperature was set to the 1st and 99th city-specific percentiles, respectively. Corresponding mortality estimate for O3 across these temperature percentiles were 0.00 % (-0.44 %, 0.44 %) and 0.53 % (0.38 %, 0.68 %). Similar effect modification results, although slightly weaker, were found for PM2.5 and NO2. Conclusions: Suggestive evidence of effect modification between air temperature and air pollutants on mortality during the warm period was found in a global dataset of 620 cities.
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