Independent and joint contributions of fine particulate matter exposure and population vulnerability to mortality in the detroit metropolitan area

Schulz, AJ; Mentz, GB; Sampson, N; Ward, M; Dvonch, JT; De Majo, R; Israel, BA; Reyes, AG; Wilkins, D

HERO ID

4914741

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2018

Language

English

PMID

29890666

HERO ID 4914741
In Press No
Year 2018
Title Independent and joint contributions of fine particulate matter exposure and population vulnerability to mortality in the detroit metropolitan area
Authors Schulz, AJ; Mentz, GB; Sampson, N; Ward, M; Dvonch, JT; De Majo, R; Israel, BA; Reyes, AG; Wilkins, D
Journal International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Volume 15
Issue 6
Page Numbers 1209
Abstract Fine particulate matter is associated with adverse health outcomes. Exposure to fine particulate matter may disproportionately affect urban communities with larger numbers of vulnerable residents. We used multilevel logistic regression models to estimate the joint effects of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and population vulnerabilities on cardiopulmonary mortality (CPM). We estimated the health benefits of reductions in PM2.5 across census tracts in the Detroit metropolitan area with varying levels of population vulnerability, using cluster-specific odds ratios scaled to reflect PM2.5-attributable cardiopulmonary risk. PM2.5 and population vulnerability were independently associated with odds of CPM. Odds of CPM and the number of deaths attributable to PM2.5 were greatest in census tracts with both high PM2.5 exposures and population vulnerability. Reducing PM2.5 in census tracts with high PM2.5 would lead to an estimated 18% annual reduction in PM2.5-attributable CPM. Between 78⁻79% of those reductions in CPM would occur within census tracts with high population vulnerabilities. These health benefits of reductions in PM2.5 occurred at levels below current U.S. reference concentrations. Focusing efforts to reduce PM2.5 in the Detroit metropolitan area in census tracts with currently high levels would also lead to greater benefits for residents of census tracts with high population vulnerabilities.
Doi 10.3390/ijerph15061209
Pmid 29890666
Wosid WOS:000436496900160
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Cardiopulmonary risk; cumulative risk; fine particulate matter; population vulnerability
Is Peer Review Yes