| Literature DB >> 20628090 |
John F Pearson1, Chethan Bachireddy, Sangameswaran Shyamprasad, Allison B Goldfine, John S Brownstein.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Recent studies have drawn attention to the adverse effects of ambient air pollutants such as particulate matter 2.5 (PM2.5) on human health. We evaluated the association between PM2.5 exposure and diabetes prevalence in the U.S. and explored factors that may influence this relationship. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: The relationship between PM2.5 levels and diagnosed diabetes prevalence in the U.S. was assessed by multivariate regression models at the county level using data obtained from both the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for years 2004 and 2005. Covariates including obesity rates, population density, ethnicity, income, education, and health insurance were collected from the U.S. Census Bureau and the CDC.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20628090 PMCID: PMC2945160 DOI: 10.2337/dc10-0698
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Care ISSN: 0149-5992 Impact factor: 19.112
Figure 1A: 2005 Diabetes prevalence and PM2.5 annual mean concentration for U.S. counties: diabetes prevalence quartiles (left) and PM2.5 annual mean concentration quartiles (right) for all contiguous U.S. counties. B: Diabetes prevalence rates per each quartile of PM2.5 for counties within the EPA PM2.5 limit (<15 μg/m3), using the 36-km PM2.5 model. The data are unadjusted for the previously mentioned covariates. Diabetes prevalence values are labeled on each bar. The quartile cut points for PM2.5 are listed in the table on the x-axis. *Statistically significant result: P < 0.05.
All PM2.5 models: multivariate results for 2004 and 2005
| PM model | Year | Covariates | β [95%CI] | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 36-km | 2004 | Census 2000 | 1.15 [1.02–1.32] | 2,754 | <0.001 |
| 36-km | 2005 | Census 2000 | 0.92 [0.75–1.13] | 2,126 | <0.001 |
| 36-km | 2004 | ACS 1-year | 0.78 [0.39–1.25] | 241 | <0.001 |
| 36-km | 2005 | ACS 1-year | 0.81 [0.48–1.07] | 766 | <0.001 |
| 12-km | 2004 | Census 2000 | 1.12 [0.95–1.31] | 2,501 | <0.001 |
| 12-km | 2005 | Census 2000 | 0.90 [0.78–1.12] | 1,945 | <0.001 |
| 12-km | 2004 | ACS 1-year | 0.96 [0.50–1.37] | 198 | <0.001 |
| 12-km | 2005 | ACS 1-year | 1.06 [0.78–1.27] | 665 | <0.001 |
| Ground | 2004 | Census 2000 | 1.10 [0.81–1.51] | 583 | <0.001 |
| Ground | 2005 | Census 2000 | 1.02 [0.77–1.34] | 556 | <0.001 |
| Ground | 2004 | ACS 1-year | 0.83 [0.25–1.32] | 211 | <0.001 |
| Ground | 2005 | ACS 1-year | 1.00 [0.73–1.36] | 428 | <0.001 |
Relationship between PM2.5 exposure estimates and diabetes prevalence from the multivariate model using ACS 1-year socioeconomic covariates or Census 2000 socioeconomic covariates.
*Both of the covariate models used the following for the PM2.5 model year: median age, percentage of men, per capita income, percentage of population >25 years with a high school diploma or general equivalency degree, percentage of Hispanics, Asians, Native Americans, African Americans, and Caucasians, health insurance, obesity, physical activity, latitude, and population density.
†The β coefficient represents the increase in the percentage of diabetes prevalence for every PM2.5 increase of 10 μg/m3.
Risk analysis: comparison of mean diabetes prevalence between counties in the lowest and highest quartiles for PM2.5 levels in 2004 and 2005
| PM model | Year | Quartile | Mean PM2.5 (μg/m3) by quartile | Mean [95%CI] diabetes prevalence | Increased diabetes prevalence (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 36-km | 2004 | Lowest | 7.71 | 7.51 [7.41–7.62] | |
| 36-km | 2004 | Highest | 12.11 | 8.95 [8.85–9.06] | 19.11 |
| 36-km | 2005 | Lowest | 7.69 | 7.75 [7.64–7.87] | |
| 36-km | 2005 | Highest | 12.75 | 9.35 [9.23–9.47] | 20.57 |
| 12-km | 2004 | Lowest | 7.78 | 7.78 [7.66–7.89] | |
| 12-km | 2004 | Highest | 11.77 | 9.03 [8.92–9.14] | 16.11 |
| 12-km | 2005 | Lowest | 8.41 | 8.03 [7.91–8.16] | |
| 12-km | 2005 | Highest | 12.38 | 9.37 [9.26–9.49] | 16.72 |
| Ground | 2004 | Lowest | 9.43 | 6.78 [6.54–7.02] | |
| Ground | 2004 | Highest | 12.69 | 8.43 [8.19–8.69] | 24.42 |
| Ground | 2005 | Lowest | 9.51 | 6.95 [6.67–7.22] | |
| Ground | 2005 | Highest | 13.65 | 8.86 [8.57–9.15] | 27.59 |
Comparison of mean diabetes prevalence in the lowest and highest PM2.5 quartiles for all counties within the EPA PM2.5 limit (<15 μg/m3). The data are unadjusted for the previously mentioned covariates.
*Mean PM2.5 value for the lowest quartile is presented first, followed by mean PM2.5 value for the highest quartile for the same year and model.
†Represents diabetes prevalence of selected PM quartile.
‡Statistically significant result: P < 0.01.