| Literature DB >> 25741390 |
Sashikanth Gurram1, Amy Lynette Stuart2, Abdul Rawoof Pinjari1.
Abstract
Daily exposures to ambient oxides of nitrogen were estimated here for residents of Hillsborough County, FL. The 2009 National Household Travel Survey provided geocoded data on fixed activity locations during each person-day sampled. Routes between activity locations were calculated from transportation network data, assuming the quickest travel path. To estimate daily exposure concentrations for each person-day, the exposure locations were matched with diurnally and spatially varying ambient pollutant concentrations derived from CALPUFF dispersion model results. The social distribution of exposures was analyzed by comparing frequency distributions of grouped daily exposure concentrations and by regression modeling. To investigate exposure error, the activity-based exposure estimates were also compared with estimates derived using residence location alone. The mean daily activity-based exposure concentration for the study sample was 17 μg/m3, with values for individual person-day records ranging from 7.0 to 43 μg/m3. The highest mean exposure concentrations were found for the following groups: black (20 μg/m3), below poverty (18 μg/m3), and urban residence location (22 μg/m3). Urban versus rural residence was associated with the largest increase in exposure concentration in the regression (8.3 μg/m3). Time in nonresidential activities, including travel, was associated with an increase of 0.2 μg/m3 per hour. Time spent travelling and at nonresidential locations contributed an average of 6 and 24 %, respectively, to the daily estimate. A mean error of 3.6 %, with range from -64 to 58 %, was found to result from using residence location alone. Exposure error was highest for those who travel most, but lowest for the sociodemographic subgroups with higher mean exposure concentrations (including blacks and those from below poverty households). This work indicates the importance of urbanicity to social disparities in activity-based air pollution exposures. It also suggests that exposure error due to using residence location may be smaller for more exposed groups.Entities:
Keywords: Environmental inequality; Exposure error; Human activity patterns; Traffic pollution; Urban form
Year: 2014 PMID: 25741390 PMCID: PMC4338342 DOI: 10.1007/s11869-014-0275-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Air Qual Atmos Health ISSN: 1873-9318 Impact factor: 3.763
Fig. 1The study area of Hillsborough County, FL. The inset provides the location of the study area within the state of Florida
Average time spent per day by activity location type
| This worka | NHAPSb | CHAPSc | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Activity typed | Minutes | Percentage | Percentage | Percentage |
| Home | 1,151 | 80 | 67 | 67 |
| Other | 116 | 8.0 | 19 | 20 |
| Work | 98 | 6.8 | 5.9 | 6.0 |
| Travel | 62 | 4.3 | 5.7 | 5.3 |
| Meals | 13 | 0.9 | 1.9 | 1.8 |
aThe filtered sample from the 2009 National Household Travel Survey (NHTS) for Hillsborough County
bNational Human Activity Pattern Survey (Klepeis et al. 2001)
cCanadian Human Activity Pattern Survey (Leech et al. 2002)
dThe following specific categories from each study were included under each label. Home refers to the NHTS home category and the NHAPS and CHAPS categories of indoor at home and outdoor at home. Work refers to the NHTS work category and the NHAPS and CHAPS office/factory category. Travel refers to the NHTS categories of travel and transport someone and the NHAPS and CHAPS categories of in vehicles and near vehicles-outside. Meals refers to the NHTS meals category and the NHAPS and CHAPS bar/restaurant category. Other refers to the NHTS categories of school/daycare/religious activity and medical/dental services, shopping/errands, family personal/business obligations, social/recreational activities, and other categories and the NHAPS and CHAPS categories of school/public building, indoors-other, outdoors-other, and mall/store
Fig. 2The spatial distribution of sample population activity time (% of time spent) and urbanicity in the study area. a % of total time spent in all activity types within the block group, b % of total time spent in nonresidential activities within the block group, c difference (%) between residential and nonresidential activity times spent in each block group, and d urbanicity category of the block group
Fig. 3The estimated diurnal cycle of hourly average ambient NOX concentrations (μg/m3) in the study area, from dispersion modeling results
Fig. 4Cumulative distributions for the activity-based daily exposure concentration (left side), residence-based daily exposure concentration (middle), and daily exposure error between the two as a percent difference, (C A−C R) / C A (right side). The box plot whiskers indicate the 5th and 95th percentile values, while cross indicates the mean value. Summary statistics are provided below each box plot; 95 % confidence intervals around each mean are in parentheses
Fig. 5Cumulative distributions of daily activity-based exposure concentration for population subgroups related to a personal attributes and b urban characteristics. Category definitions are provided in the text. Note that the racioethnic subgroup populations are not exclusive, populations have overlapping individuals
Group distribution statistics for daily activity-based exposure concentration and exposure error
| Exposure concentration (μg/m3) | Exposure error (%) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group | Values of | Mean | Confidence interval | Min | Max | Mean | Confidence interval | Min | Max |
| Race/ethnicitya | 1,173 | ||||||||
| Black | 115 | 20 | (19.0–21.5) | 8.5 | 43 | 1 | (−1.1–3.3) | −64 | 34 |
| Hispanic | 29 | 18 | (15.9–19.2) | 11 | 28 | 5 | (1.3–9.6) | −8.9 | 45 |
| White | 1,029 | 16 | (16.0–16.6) | 7.0 | 41 | 4 | (3.3–4.4) | −32 | 58 |
| Incomeb | 1,131 | ||||||||
| Below poverty | 137 | 18 | (17.1–19.2) | 7.4 | 43 | 1 | (−0.6–2.6) | −64 | 45 |
| Middle income | 577 | 17 | (16.8–17.6) | 7.0 | 41 | 3 | (1.9–3.5) | −52 | 53 |
| Higher income | 417 | 16 | (15.6–16.5) | 7.4 | 32 | 6 | (4.6–6.5) | −31 | 58 |
| Age | 1,224 | ||||||||
| 5–18 years | 148 | 17 | (16.1–17.9) | 8.5 | 29 | 3 | (0.6–4.6) | −64 | 53 |
| 19–65 years | 665 | 17 | (16.6–17.4) | 7.0 | 41 | 5 | (4.2–6.0) | −48 | 58 |
| Over 65 years | 411 | 16 | (15.9–16.9) | 7.4 | 43 | 1 | (1.0–1.8) | −17 | 23 |
| Urbanicity | 1,224 | ||||||||
| Urban | 267 | 22 | (21.2–22.4) | 12 | 43 | 0 | (−1.3–0.9) | −64 | 25 |
| Suburban | 387 | 17 | (16.3–17.2) | 10 | 35 | 4 | (3.3–5.2) | −31 | 42 |
| Second city | 287 | 16 | (15.5–16.2) | 8.8 | 25 | 4 | (3.1–4.9) | −31 | 38 |
| Rural | 283 | 13 | (12.6–13.6) | 7.0 | 27 | 6 | (4.3–7.1) | −17 | 58 |
| Daily travel time | 1,224 | ||||||||
| More than 60 min | 452 | 17 | (17.0–17.8) | 8.5 | 41 | 8 | (6.5–8.8) | −32 | 58 |
| Up to 60 min | 533 | 17 | (16.2–17.1) | 7.6 | 43 | 2 | (1.0–2.4) | −64 | 42 |
| No travel | 239 | 16 | (15.3–16.7) | 7.0 | 35 | 0 | (0–0) | 0 | 0 |
aRacioethnic labels used here are shortened forms of the race and origin category labels used by the US Census. Category descriptions are available at www.census.gov. Note that placement in a category is by self-selection, and individuals may be categorized in multiple or no categories
bThe below poverty, middle-income, and higher-income labels refer to households with income below the poverty threshold, above the poverty threshold but less than $75,000 and $75,000 or above
Linear regression model for activity-based exposure concentration
| Explanatory variable | Coefficienta ( |
| Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Constantb (β0) | 11.5 | 35 | 3e-180 |
| Black | 1.2 | 2.9 | 3e-3 |
| Below poverty | 1.7 | 4.3 | 2e-5 |
| Middle incomec | 1.2 | 4.7 | 2e-6 |
| Urban | 8.3 | 23 | 1e-98 |
| Suburban | 3.4 | 11 | 8e-25 |
| Second city | 2.6 | 7.5 | 1e-13 |
| Time away from residence | 0.2 | 6.8 | 1e-11 |
| Goodness of fit | |||
|
| 0.40 | ||
| Adjusted | 0.39 | ||
| Number of cases | 1,120 | ||
aThe regression model is C A (μg/m3) = β 0 + β 1 X c1 + β 2 X c2 + …γ 1 X t1 + γ 2 X t2 + … + ε, where X ci ∈ {1,0} are the binary variables and X ti are the continuous variables. Only the time variable was entered as a continuous variable (with units of hours). β i have units of μg/m3, γ i have units of (μg/m3)·h
bThe constant concentration represents exposures for people who are nonblack with incomes over $75,000, who live in town/rural areas and did not travel on the sample day
cMiddle income refers to households with income above the poverty threshold but less than $75,000
Fig. 6Cumulative distributions of time-weighted NOX concentration (μg/m3) (left-side) and NOX exposure (μg/m3)·h (right-side) by activity type location for all sampled daily records including some activity away from residence. Summary statistics are provided below each box plot; 95 % confidence intervals around each mean are in parentheses
Fig. 7Cumulative distributions of exposure error for population subgroups related to a personal attributes and b urban characteristics. Middle income refers to households with income above the poverty threshold but with incomes less than $75 thousand (k). Note that the racioethnic subgroup populations are not exclusive, and populations have overlapping individuals