| Literature DB >> 33259502 |
Renata E Howland1, Nicholas R Cowan1,2, Scarlett S Wang1, Mitchell L Moss1,2, Sherry Glied1.
Abstract
One important concern around the spread of respiratory infectious diseases has been the contribution of public transportation, a space where people are in close contact with one another and with high-use surfaces. While disease clearly spreads along transportation routes, there is limited evidence about whether public transportation use itself is associated with the overall prevalence of contagious respiratory illnesses at the local level. We examine the extent of the association between public transportation and influenza mortality, a proxy for disease prevalence, using city-level data on influenza and pneumonia mortality and public transit use from 121 large cities in the United States (US) between 2006 and 2015. We find no evidence of a positive relationship between city-level transit ridership and influenza/pneumonia mortality rates, suggesting that population level rates of transit use are not a singularly important factor in the transmission of influenza.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33259502 PMCID: PMC7707463 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0242990
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The top and bottom 10 cities by influenza/pneumonia rates for 2015.
| Top 10 Cities | Flu/Pneumonia Deaths per 100,000 | Total Population | Bottom 10 Cities | Flu/Pneumonia Deaths per 100,000 | Total Population | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Dayton, OH | 329.64 | 141368 | New York, NY | 23.44 | 8426743 |
| 2 | Birmingham, AL | 325.62 | 212211 | Newark, NJ | 23.23 | 279793 |
| 3 | Pueblo, CO | 292.38 | 30440 | Lynn, MA | 21.83 | 91626 |
| 4 | Salt Lake, UT | 291.59 | 190679 | New Orleans, LA | 18.58 | 376738 |
| 5 | Peoria, IL | 282.27 | 115847 | El Paso, TX | 18.19 | 676325 |
| 6 | Knoxville, TN | 278.04 | 183066 | Seattle, WA | 10.57 | 653017 |
| 7 | Little Rock, AK | 270.13 | 196943 | Denver, CO | 10.47 | 649654 |
| 8 | Tacoma, WA | 261.94 | 203481 | Trenton, NJ | 7.09 | 84632 |
| 9 | Worcester, MA | 245.93 | 183382 | Somerville, MA | 3.82 | 78595 |
| 10 | South Bend, IN | 227.66 | 100590 | Springfield, MA | 0.65 | 153947 |
Source: CDC Weekly Influenza/Pneumonia Deaths from 2015 linked with ACS transit data for 2010–2015 by city, which provides population denominators for rates
The top and bottom 10 cities by percent transit commuters in 2015.
| Top 10 Cities | Percent individuals over 16 years old who take public transit to work | Bottom 10 Cities | Percent individuals over 16 years old who take public transit to work | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | New York, NY | 56.50 | Lincoln, NE | 1.40 |
| 2 | Jersey City, NJ | 47.62 | Little Rock, AR | 1.16 |
| 3 | Washington, DC | 37.41 | Tulsa, OK | 1.08 |
| 4 | Boston, MA | 33.67 | Fort Wayne, IN | 1.04 |
| 5 | San Francisco, CA | 33.14 | Colorado Springs, CO | 1.02 |
| 6 | Somerville, MA | 32.31 | Montgomery, AL | 0.85 |
| 7 | Cambridge, MA | 28.62 | Mobile, AL | 0.82 |
| 8 | Chicago, IL | 27.63 | Boise, ID | 0.76 |
| 9 | Newark, NJ | 26.74 | Wichita, KS | 0.66 |
| 10 | Yonkers, NY | 26.39 | Pueblo, CO | 0.10 |
Source: American Community Survey data from 2010–2015 linked with 119 cities from the CDC Weekly Influenza/Pneumonia Deaths from 2015
Note: 2 cities used elsewhere in the analysis do not appear in the 2015 data.
Fig 1Population-adjusted influenza /pneumonia death rates compared with public transit ridership in 121 major cities in the United States, 2015.
Source: CDC Weekly Influenza/Pneumonia Deaths from 2015 linked with ACS transit data for 2010–2015 by city and adjusted by the city age-distribution in a negative binomial regression.
The association between public transit use and influenza/pneumonia deaths in 121 cities across the United States between 2006–2015.
| Model A | Model B | |
|---|---|---|
| Model | Baseline Negative Binomial (N = 1201) | Adjusted Negative Binomial (N = 1201) |
| IRR for transit use measure (standard error) | 0.980 | 0.986 |
| Model Variables | Includes flu year and age distribution | Also includes region, percent bachelor’s degree or higher, nonwhite, male, below poverty, and unemployed |
Note: All standard errors are clustered by city
*p-value < 0.1
**p-value < 0.05
***p-value < 0.01
Sensitivity tests on the association between public transit use and influenza/pneumonia deaths in 121 cities across the United States between 2006–2015.
| Model A | Model B | Model C | Model D | Model E | Model F | Model G | Model H | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model | Adjusted Poisson (N = 1201) | Adjusted Negative Binomial including flu vaccination for 2015 (N = 330) | Adjusted Negative Binomial limited to cities with >5% using transit (N = 520) | Adjusted Negative Binomial with exposure as the percent commuting >60 minutes (N = 1201) | Adjusted Negative Binomial adjusting for total death count (N = 1201) | Adjusted Linear Regression with outcome as ratio of flu to pneumonia deaths (N = 963) | Adjusted Negative Binomial including population density (N = 1201) | Fixed Effects Regression (N = 1201) |
| IRR on % commuting (standard error) | 0.984 | 0.990 (0.972, 1.008) | 0.982 | 0.993 | 0.980 | -0.0004 (-0.002, 0.001) | 1.013 (0.993, 1.033) | 1.01 (0.986, 1.034) |
| Additional Variables | Same as adjusted negative binomial | Same + city flu vaccination prevalence among 65+ | Same as adjusted negative binomial | Same as adjusted negative binomial | Same + total deaths by city/flu year | Same as adjusted negative binomial | Same as adjusted negative binomial adding population density | Fixed effects for cities |
Note: All standard errors are clustered by city
*p-value < 0.1
**p-value < 0.05
***p-value < 0.01
Fig 2The association between average death rates in 2006–2008 and 2013–2015 in cities with the largest absolute increase and decrease in public transit ridership (n = 24).
Source: CDC Weekly Influenza/Pneumonia Deaths from 2006–2016 linked with ACS transit data by city and year for 24 cities with the largest increase and decrease in transit between 2006–2010 and 2011–2015.
Fig 3The incidence rate ratio of percent public transit on flu/pneumonia deaths over 100 simulations of the negative binomial model sampling 75% of observations.
Source: CDC Weekly Influenza/Pneumonia Deaths from 2006–2016 linked with ACS transit data by city and year, Incidence Rate Ratio from negative binomial model adjusting for flu year, age distribution, region, percent bachelor’s degree or higher, nonwhite, male, below poverty, and unemployed.