| Literature DB >> 33387778 |
Danielle Vienneau1, Seçkin Boz2, Lukas Forlin2, Benjamin Flückiger2, Kees de Hoogh2, Claudia Berlin3, Murielle Bochud4, Jean-Luc Bulliard4, Marcel Zwahlen3, Martin Röösli2.
Abstract
Residential radon exposure is a major public health issue in Switzerland due to the known association between inhaled radon progeny and lung cancer. To confirm recent findings of an association with skin cancer mortality, an updated national radon model is needed. The aim of this study was to derive the best possible residential radon prediction model for subsequent epidemiological analyses. Two different radon prediction models were developed (linear regression model vs. random forest) using ca. 80,000 measurements in the Swiss Radon Database (1994-2017). A range of geographic predictors and building specific predictors were considered in the 3-D models (x,y, floor of dwelling). A five-fold modelling strategy was used to evaluate the robustness of each approach, with models developed (80% measurement locations) and validated (20%) using standard diagnostics. Random forest consistently outperformed the linear regression model, with higher Spearman's rank correlation (51% vs. 36%), validation coefficient of determination (R2 31% vs. 15%), lower root mean square error (RMSE) and lower fractional bias. Applied to the population of 5.4 million adults in 2000, the random forest resulted in an arithmetic mean (standard deviation) of 75.5 (31.7) Bq/m3, and indicated a respective 16.1% and 0.1% adults with predicted radon concentrations exceeding the World Health Organization (100 Bq/m3) and Swiss (300 Bq/m3) reference values.Entities:
Keywords: Exposure; Household; Modelling; Radon
Year: 2020 PMID: 33387778 DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2020.116356
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Pollut ISSN: 0269-7491 Impact factor: 8.071