4.6 Article

A study protocol to evaluate the relationship between outdoor air pollution and pregnancy outcomes

Journal

BMC PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-10-613

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Regional Development and Coordinating Commission for Alentejo (CCDRA)
  2. Alentejo Regional Health Administration (ARSA)
  3. Municipality of Sines
  4. Municipality of Santiago do Cacem
  5. Municipality of Grandola
  6. Municipality of Alcacer do Sal
  7. Municipality of Odemira
  8. School of Engineering of Technical University of Lisbon (IST-UTL)
  9. Foundation of the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Lisbon (FFCUL)
  10. Instituto Superior de Ciencias do Trabalho e Empresa (ISCTE)
  11. Instituto de Estudos Superiores de Recursos Naturais (INESRE)
  12. Petroleos de Portugal
  13. Repsol
  14. Administracao do Porto de Sines (APS)
  15. Aguas de Santo Andre (AdSA)
  16. AICEP
  17. CARBOGAL
  18. Electricidade de Portugal (EDP)
  19. EuroResinas
  20. KIMAXTRA
  21. REN
  22. GENERG

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background: The present study protocol is designed to assess the relationship between outdoor air pollution and low birth weight and preterm births outcomes performing a semi-ecological analysis. Semi-ecological design studies are widely used to assess effects of air pollution in humans. In this type of analysis, health outcomes and covariates are measured in individuals and exposure assignments are usually based on air quality monitor stations. Therefore, estimating individual exposures are one of the major challenges when investigating these relationships with a semi-ecologic design. Methods/Design: Semi-ecologic study consisting of a retrospective cohort study with ecologic assignment of exposure is applied. Health outcomes and covariates are collected at Primary Health Care Center. Data from pregnant registry, clinical record and specific questionnaire administered orally to the mothers of children born in period 2007-2010 in Portuguese Alentejo Litoral region, are collected by the research team. Outdoor air pollution data are collected with a lichen diversity biomonitoring program, and individual pregnancy exposures are assessed with spatial geostatistical simulation, which provides the basis for uncertainty analysis of individual exposures. Awareness of outdoor air pollution uncertainty will improve validity of individual exposures assignments for further statistical analysis with multivariate regression models. Discussion: Exposure misclassification is an issue of concern in semi-ecological design. In this study, personal exposures are assigned to each pregnant using geocoded addresses data. A stochastic simulation method is applied to lichen diversity values index measured at biomonitoring survey locations, in order to assess spatial uncertainty of lichen diversity value index at each geocoded address. These methods assume a model for spatial autocorrelation of exposure and provide a distribution of exposures in each study location. We believe that variability of simulated exposure values at geocoded addresses will improve knowledge on variability of exposures, improving therefore validity of individual exposures to input in posterior statistical analysis.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available