Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.

Air pollution and mortality in twenty-five Italian cities: Results of the EpiAir2 Project [Inquinamento atmosferico e mortalità in venticinque città Italiane: Risultati del progetto EpiAir2]

TitoloAir pollution and mortality in twenty-five Italian cities: Results of the EpiAir2 Project [Inquinamento atmosferico e mortalità in venticinque città Italiane: Risultati del progetto EpiAir2]
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2013
AutoriAlessandrini, E.R., Faustini A., Chiusolo M., Stafoggia M., Gandini M., Demaria M., Antonelli A., Arena P., Biggeri A., Canova C., et al.
RivistaEpidemiologia e Prevenzione
Volume37
Paginazione220-229
ISSN11209763
Parole chiaveadult, Air pollution, cause of death, cerebrovascular disease, Cerebrovascular Disorders, Cities, city, Environmental monitoring, epidemiological monitoring, epidemiology, Health, heart disease, Heart Diseases, human, Humans, Italy, Mortality, respiratory tract disease, Respiratory Tract Diseases, Urban Health
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: this study aims at presenting the results from the Italian EpiaAir2 Project on the short-term effects of air pollution on adult population (35+ years old) in 25 Italian cities. DESIGN: the short-term effects of air pollution on resident people died in their city were analysed adopting the time series approach. The association between increases in 10 μg/m3 in PM10, PM2.5, NO2 and O3 air concentration and natural, cardiac, cerebrovascular and respiratory mortality was studied. City-specific Poisson models were fitted to estimate the association of daily concentrations of pollutants with daily counts of deaths. The analysis took into account temporal and meteorological factors to control for potential confounding effect. Pooled estimates have been derived from random-effects meta-analysis, evaluating the presence of heterogeneity in the city-specific results. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: it was analysed 422,723 deaths in the 25 cities of the project among people aged 35 years or more, resident in each city during the period 2006-2010. MAIN OUTCOMES: daily counts of natural, cardiac, cerebrovascular, and respiratory mortality, obtained from the registries of each city. Demographic information were obtained by record linkage procedure with the civil registry of each city. RESULTS: mean numberofdeaths for natural causes ranged from 513 in Rovigo to 20,959 in Rome. About 25% of deaths are duetocardiac diseases, 10%tocerebrovascular diseases, and 7% to respiratory diseases. It was found an immediate effect of PM10 on natural mortality (0.51%; 95%CI 0.16-0.86; lag 0-1). More relevant and prolonged effects (lag 0-5) have been found for PM2.5 (0.78%; 95%CI 0.12-1.46) and NO2 (1.10%; 95%CI 0.63-1.58). Increases in cardiac mortality are associated with PM10 (0.93%; 95%CI 0.16-1.70) and PM2.5 (1.25%; 95%CI 0.17-2.34), while for respiratory mortality exposure to NO 2 has an important role (1.67%; 95%CI 0.23-3.13; lag 2-5), as well as PM10 (1.41%; 95%CI-0.23;+3.08). Results are strongly homogeneous among cities, except for respiratory mortality. No effect has been found for cerebrovascular mortality and weak evidence of association has been observed between ozone and mortality. CONCLUSIONS: a clear increase in mortality associated to air pollutants was observed. More important are the effects of NO2 (on natural mortality), mostly associated with traffic emissions, and of PM2.5 (on cardiac and respiratory mortality). Nitrogen dioxide shows an independent effect from the particulate matter, as observed in the bi-pollutant models.

Note

cited By 15

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84892516571&partnerID=40&md5=896aec80952a5b8368c37c9e92b7b8b0
Citation KeyAlessandrini2013220