Association of Short-term Exposure to Air Pollution With Mortality in Older Adults

Dec 28, 2017JAMA

Short-term air pollution linked to higher death rates in older adults

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Abstract

Of 22,433,862 case days studied, 93.6% had PM2.5 levels below 25 μg/m3, which were associated with 95.2% of deaths.

  • Short-term increases of 10 μg/m3 in PM2.5 were associated with a 1.05% increase in daily mortality rate.
  • A 10 parts per billion increase in warm-season ozone was linked to a 0.51% rise in daily mortality rate.
  • Absolute risk differences in daily mortality rates were 1.42 and 0.66 per 1 million persons at risk per day for PM2.5 and ozone, respectively.
  • The majority of case and control days occurred at pollution levels below current national air quality standards.
  • There was no evidence of a threshold in the exposure-response relationship for PM2.5 and ozone.

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