Literature DB >> 11246798

Monitor-to-monitor temporal correlation of air pollution and weather variables in the North-Central U.S.

K Ito1, G D Thurston, A Nádas, M Lippmann.   

Abstract

Numerous time series studies have reported associations between daily ambient concentrations of air pollution and morbidity or mortality. Recent personal exposure studies have also reported relatively high longitudinal correlation between personal exposures to particulate matter (PM) and home outdoor PM concentrations, lending support to the health effects reported in time series studies. However, the question remains as to how well the temporal fluctuations in the air pollution levels observed at an outdoor monitor represent the temporal fluctuations in the population exposures to pollution of outdoor origins in a city, and how such representativeness affects the size and significance of risk estimates. Also, such spatio-temporal correlations would vary from pollutant to pollutant, likely influencing their relative significance of statistical associations with health outcomes. In this study, we characterized the extent of monitor-to-monitor correlation over time among multiple monitoring sites for PM less than 10 microm (PM10), gaseous criteria pollutants, and several weather variables in seven central and eastern contiguous states (IL, IN, MI, OH, PA, WI, and WV) during the study period of 1988-1990. After removing seasonal trends, the monitor-to-monitor temporal correlation among the air pollution/weather variables within 100-mile separation distance in these areas could be generally ranked into three groups: (1 ) temperature, dew point, relative humidity (r>0.9); (2) O3, PM10, NO2 (r: 0.8-0.6); and (3) CO, SO2 (r<0.5). Using the subsets for separation distance less than 100 miles, regression analyses of these monitor-to-monitor correlation coefficients were also conducted with explanatory variables including separation distance, qualitative (land use, location setting, and monitoring objectives) and quantitative (large and small variance) site characteristics, and region indicators for Air Quality Control Region (AQCR). The separation distance was a significant predictor of monitorto-monitor correlation decline especially for PM10 and NO2 (approximately 0.2 drop over 30 miles). Site characteristic variables were, in some cases, significant predictors of monitor-to-monitor correlation, but the magnitude of their impacts was not substantial. Regional differences, as examined by AQCR, were in some cases (e.g., in Metropolitan Philadelphia) substantial. In these areas, the pollutants that had generally poor monitor-to-monitor correlation in the overall seven states data (i.e., for SO2 and CO) showed higher monitor-to-monitor correlations, comparable with PM10 and O3, within the AQCR. These results are useful in interpreting some of the past time series epidemiological results. The differences in monitor-to-monitor correlations found across pollutants in this work (i.e., r approximately 0.8 vs. r approximately 0.4) are sufficiently large that they could be a factor in the different pollutant significance levels reported in the epidemiologic literature. It is recommended that future epidemiological studies collect and incorporate information on spatial variability among air pollutants in the analysis and interpretation of their results.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11246798     DOI: 10.1038/sj.jea.7500144

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Expo Anal Environ Epidemiol        ISSN: 1053-4245


  7 in total

1.  Effectiveness of residential wood-burning regulation on decreasing particulate matter levels and hospitalizations in the San Joaquin Valley Air Basin.

Authors:  Poh-Sin Yap; Cynthia Garcia
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2015-02-25       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  Community-level spatial heterogeneity of chemical constituent levels of fine particulates and implications for epidemiological research.

Authors:  Michelle L Bell; Keita Ebisu; Roger D Peng
Journal:  J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol       Date:  2010-07-28       Impact factor: 5.563

3.  The use of alternative pollutant metrics in time-series studies of ambient air pollution and respiratory emergency department visits.

Authors:  Lyndsey A Darrow; Mitchel Klein; Jeremy A Sarnat; James A Mulholland; Matthew J Strickland; Stefanie E Sarnat; Armistead G Russell; Paige E Tolbert
Journal:  J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol       Date:  2009-09-16       Impact factor: 5.563

4.  Ambient particulate air pollution and ectopy--the environmental epidemiology of arrhythmogenesis in Women's Health Initiative Study, 1999-2004.

Authors:  Duanping Liao; Eric A Whitsel; Yinkang Duan; Hung-Mo Lin; P Miguel Quibrera; Richard Smith; Donna J Peuquet; Ronald J Prineas; Zhu-Ming Zhang; Garnet Anderson
Journal:  J Toxicol Environ Health A       Date:  2009

Review 5.  The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Particulate Matter Health Effects Research Centers Program: a midcourse report of status, progress, and plans.

Authors:  Morton Lippmann; Mark Frampton; Joel Schwartz; Douglas Dockery; Richard Schlesinger; Petros Koutrakis; John Froines; Andre Nel; Jack Finkelstein; John Godleski; Joel Kaufman; Jane Koenig; Tim Larson; Dan Luchtel; L-J Sally Liu; Gunter Oberdorster; Annette Peters; Jeremy Sarnat; Constantinos Sioutas; Helen Suh; Jeff Sullivan; Mark Utell; Erich Wichmann; Judith Zelikoff
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2003-06       Impact factor: 9.031

6.  Identification of Health Effects of Complex Air Pollution in China.

Authors:  Yuxin Zhao; Xingqin An; Zhaobin Sun; Yi Li; Qing Hou
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2022-10-03       Impact factor: 4.614

7.  Ambient fine particulate matter exposure and myocardial ischemia in the Environmental Epidemiology of Arrhythmogenesis in the Women's Health Initiative (EEAWHI) study.

Authors:  Zhu-Ming Zhang; Eric A Whitsel; P Miguel Quibrera; Richard L Smith; Duanping Liao; Garnet L Anderson; Ronald J Prineas
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2009-01-23       Impact factor: 9.031

  7 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.