Literature DB >> 20462389

Is the air pollution health research community prepared to support a multipollutant air quality management framework?

Joe L Mauderly1, Richard T Burnett, Margarita Castillejos, Halûk Ozkaynak, Jonathan M Samet, David M Stieb, Sverre Vedal, Ronald E Wyzga.   

Abstract

Ambient air pollution is always encountered as a complex mixture, but past regulatory and research strategies largely focused on single pollutants, pollutant classes, and sources one-at-a-time. There is a trend toward managing air quality in a progressively "multipollutant" manner, with the idealized goal of controlling as many air contaminants as possible in an integrated manner to achieve the greatest total reduction of adverse health and environmental impacts. This commentary considers the current ability of the environmental air pollution exposure and health research communities to provide evidence to inform the development of multipollutant air quality management strategies and assess their effectiveness. The commentary is not a literature review, but a summary of key issues and information gaps, strategies for filling the gaps, and realistic expectations for progress that could be made during the next decade. The greatest need is for researchers and sponsors to address air quality health impacts from a truly multipollutant perspective, and the most limiting current information gap is knowledge of personal exposures of different subpopulations, considering activities and microenvironments. Emphasis is needed on clarifying the roles of a broader range of pollutants and their combinations in a more forward-looking manner; that is not driven by current regulatory structures. Although advances in research tools and outcome data will enhance progress, the greater need is to direct existing capabilities toward strategies aimed at placing into proper context the contributions of multiple pollutants and their combinations to the health burdens, and the relative contributions of pollutants and other factors influencing the same outcomes. The authors conclude that the research community has very limited ability to advise multipollutant air quality management and assess its effectiveness at this time, but that considerable progress can be made in a decade, even at current funding levels, if resources and incentives are shifted appropriately.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20462389     DOI: 10.3109/08958371003793846

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Inhal Toxicol        ISSN: 0895-8378            Impact factor:   2.724


  30 in total

1.  Microglial priming through the lung-brain axis: the role of air pollution-induced circulating factors.

Authors:  Christen L Mumaw; Shannon Levesque; Constance McGraw; Sarah Robertson; Selita Lucas; Jillian E Stafflinger; Matthew J Campen; Pamela Hall; Jeffrey P Norenberg; Tamara Anderson; Amie K Lund; Jacob D McDonald; Andrew K Ottens; Michelle L Block
Journal:  FASEB J       Date:  2016-02-10       Impact factor: 5.191

2.  Development of outcome-based, multipollutant mobile source indicators.

Authors:  Jorge E Pachon; Sivaraman Balachandran; Yongtao Hu; James A Mulholland; Lyndsey A Darrow; Jeremy A Sarnat; Paige E Tolbert; Armistead G Russell
Journal:  J Air Waste Manag Assoc       Date:  2012-04       Impact factor: 2.235

3.  Framing air pollution epidemiology in terms of population interventions, with applications to multipollutant modeling.

Authors:  Jonathan M Snowden; Colleen E Reid; Ira B Tager
Journal:  Epidemiology       Date:  2015-03       Impact factor: 4.822

4.  Health effects of multi-pollutant profiles.

Authors:  Antonella Zanobetti; Elena Austin; Brent A Coull; Joel Schwartz; Petros Koutrakis
Journal:  Environ Int       Date:  2014-06-17       Impact factor: 9.621

5.  Atypical microglial response to biodiesel exhaust in healthy and hypertensive rats.

Authors:  Christen L Mumaw; Michael Surace; Shannon Levesque; Urmila P Kodavanti; Prasada Rao S Kodavanti; Joyce E Royland; Michelle L Block
Journal:  Neurotoxicology       Date:  2016-10-21       Impact factor: 4.294

Review 6.  Statistical Approaches to Address Multi-Pollutant Mixtures and Multiple Exposures: the State of the Science.

Authors:  Massimo Stafoggia; Susanne Breitner; Regina Hampel; Xavier Basagaña
Journal:  Curr Environ Health Rep       Date:  2017-12

Review 7.  A cross-disciplinary evaluation of evidence for multipollutant effects on cardiovascular disease.

Authors:  Thomas J Luben; Barbara J Buckley; Molini M Patel; Tina Stevens; Evan Coffman; Kristen M Rappazzo; Elizabeth O Owens; Erin P Hines; Danielle Moore; Kyle Painter; Ryan Jones; Laura Datko-Williams; Adrien A Wilkie; Meagan Madden; Jennifer Richmond-Bryant
Journal:  Environ Res       Date:  2017-11-13       Impact factor: 6.498

8.  Joint effects of ambient air pollutants on pediatric asthma emergency department visits in Atlanta, 1998-2004.

Authors:  Andrea Winquist; Ellen Kirrane; Mitch Klein; Matthew Strickland; Lyndsey A Darrow; Stefanie Ebelt Sarnat; Katherine Gass; James Mulholland; Armistead Russell; Paige Tolbert
Journal:  Epidemiology       Date:  2014-09       Impact factor: 4.822

Review 9.  Systematic review and metaanalysis of air pollution exposure and risk of diabetes.

Authors:  Mohsen Janghorbani; Fatemeh Momeni; Marjan Mansourian
Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol       Date:  2014-05-04       Impact factor: 8.082

10.  The joint effect of ambient air pollution and agricultural pesticide exposures on lung function among children with asthma.

Authors:  Wande Benka-Coker; Lauren Hoskovec; Rachel Severson; John Balmes; Ander Wilson; Sheryl Magzamen
Journal:  Environ Res       Date:  2020-07-18       Impact factor: 6.498

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