4.7 Article

Short-term effects of daily air pollution on mortality

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT
Volume 65, Issue -, Pages 69-79

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2012.10.019

Keywords

Relative risk; Health; Mortality; O-3; CO; PM10; Klang Valley; Malaysia

Funding

  1. Institute for Medical Research (IMR)
  2. National Institute for the Health [NONCAM-07-014]
  3. Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia [UKM-NN-03-FRGS0041-2010]

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The daily variations of air pollutants in the Klang Valley, Malaysia, which includes Kuala Lumpur were investigated for its association with mortality counts using time series analysis. This study located in the tropic with much less seasonal variation than typically seen in more temperate climates. Data on daily mortality for the Klang Valley (2000-2006), daily mean concentrations of air pollutants of PM10, SO2, CO, NO2, O-3, daily maximum O-3 and meteorological conditions were obtained from Malaysian Department of Environment. We examined the association between pollutants and daily mortality using Poisson regression while controlling for time trends and meteorological factors. Effects of the pollutants (Relative Risk, RR) on current-day (lag 0) mortality to seven previous days (lag 7) and the effects of the pollutants from the first two days (lag 01) to the first eight days (lag 07) were determined. We found significant associations in the single-pollutant model for PM10 and the daily mean O-3 with natural mortality. For the daily mean O-3, the highest association was at lag 05 (RR = 1.0215, 95% CI = 1.0013-1.0202). CO was found not significantly associated with natural mortality, however the RR's of CO were found to be consistently higher than PM10. In spite of significant results of PM10, the magnitude of RR's of PM10 was not important for natural mortality in comparison with either daily mean O-3 or CO. There is an association between daily mean O-3 and natural mortality in a two-pollutants model after adjusting for PM10. Most pollutants except SO2, were significantly associated with respiratory mortality in a single pollutant model. Daily mean O-3 is also important for respiratory mortality, with over 10% of mortality associated with every IQR increased. These findings are noteworthy because seasonal confounding is unlikely in this relatively stable climate, by contrast with more temperate regions. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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