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Cumulative effects and threshold levels in air pollution mortality: Data analysis of nine large US cities using the NMMAPS dataset
Authors:Mario Stylianou  Mark J Nicolich
Institution:1. Department of Laboratory Medicine, Xiangya School of Medicine, Central South University, Changsha 410013, PR China;2. Health Management Centre, The Third Xiangya Hospital, Central South University, Changsha 410013, PR China;1. Gradient, 20 University Road, Cambridge, MA, United States;2. Gradient, 600 Stewart Street, Suite 1900, Seattle, WA, United States;3. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, 12100 Park 35 Circle, Austin, TX, United States
Abstract:We examined the existence of thresholds, cumulative effects and the homogeneity of five air pollutants on the relative risk of three mortality outcomes using data from nine major US cities using data from NMMAPS. Overall, PM10 (usually 200-day accumulation) and ozone (3-day accumulation) were the two important predictors of outcome but their effect was not uniform across the nine cities. Many models exhibited thresholds (25–45 μm g/m3 for PM10, and 10–45 ppb for O3). Our preliminary exploratory analyses suggest that the use of a linear, no threshold, model for pollution studies is not consistent with the observed data. The heterogeneity in the risk estimates across the nine cities suggests combining the local risk estimates to obtain a national risk estimate may not be justifiable and the estimate is likely to be confounded.
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