Socioeconomic and ethnic inequalities in exposure to air and noise pollution in London

Mar 26, 2018Environment international

Differences in Air and Noise Pollution Exposure by Income and Ethnic Groups in London

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Abstract

High-income individuals experienced 1.9 μg/min greater personal nitrogen dioxide exposure compared to low-income individuals despite lower residential levels.

  • Socioeconomic inequalities in air pollution exposure differ significantly between residential and personal measurements.
  • For the lowest income group (<£10,000), personal nitrogen dioxide exposure was higher than residential levels for the highest income group (>£75,000).
  • Inequalities in residential nitrogen dioxide exposure were more pronounced at lower exposure quantiles related to area-level deprivation.
  • Air pollution exposure at residence tended to overestimate personal exposure, with variances linked to age, household income, and area-level income deprivation.
  • Small inequalities in road traffic noise were observed, with higher odds of exposure to aircraft noise among high-income and white individuals.
  • Black individuals had a 19% higher likelihood of living near rail noise compared to white individuals.

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