The synergistic health impacts of exposure to multiple stressors in Tulare County, California

Michael Gee, Thomas E McKone
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Tulare County is located in the Central Valley region of California. Its population is exposed to stressors that include high levels of air, water, and soil pollution, socioeconomic strain, and poor access to walkable areas and healthy foods. As a result, this population suffers from a high disease burden compared to other California counties.
Objective
We hypothesize that environmental and socioeconomic stressors interact in complex ways to raise the burden of disease in the Tulare population beyond additive impacts.
Method
We used CalEnviroScreen to select Tulare County as the subject of the study and characterized the geographical interaction of stressors. The CalEnviroScreen indicators provided the basis for population-weighted average calculations to determine the most critical environmental and socioeconomic stressors in Tulare County. We also analyzed and interpreted walkability and dietary access through open-source data. In addition, we compared disease-based mortality in Tulare County to California state averages.
Results
Our evaluation reveals that the population living within the census tracts of Tulare County is exposed to environmental stressors at significantly higher levels relative to many other Californian census tracts, specifically for PM2.5, ozone, and drinking water quality. Relatively high exposures to socioeconomic stressors can compound resulting health impacts. We use dose-response curves and stressor mapping to characterize how multiple stressors may augment a population's vulnerability and effective doses from exposure to multiple stressors.
Significance
Previous health-impact studies have linked individual environmental stressors to their respective measures of disease. However, many communities continue to be exposed daily to numerous stressors that individually are within regulatory limits but could significantly magnify risk due to the synergistic effects. Dose-response curves tailored to population vulnerability provide a basis for quantifying the synergistic risks of multiple stressors on specific measures of disease.
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract Background
Tulare County is located in the Central Valley region of California. Its population is exposed to stressors that include high levels of air, water, and soil pollution, socioeconomic strain, and poor access to walkable areas and healthy foods. As a result, this population suffers from a high disease burden compared to other California counties.
Objective
We hypothesize that environmental and socioeconomic stressors interact in complex ways to raise the burden of disease in the Tulare population beyond additive impacts.
Method
We used CalEnviroScreen to select Tulare County as the subject of the study and characterized the geographical interaction of stressors. The CalEnviroScreen indicators provided the basis for population-weighted average calculations to determine the most critical environmental and socioeconomic stressors in Tulare County. We also analyzed and interpreted walkability and dietary access through open-source data. In addition, we compared disease-based mortality in Tulare County to California state averages.
Results
Our evaluation reveals that the population living within the census tracts of Tulare County is exposed to environmental stressors at significantly higher levels relative to many other Californian census tracts, specifically for PM2.5, ozone, and drinking water quality. Relatively high exposures to socioeconomic stressors can compound resulting health impacts. We use dose-response curves and stressor mapping to characterize how multiple stressors may augment a population's vulnerability and effective doses from exposure to multiple stressors.
Significance
Previous health-impact studies have linked individual environmental stressors to their respective measures of disease. However, many communities continue to be exposed daily to numerous stressors that individually are within regulatory limits but could significantly magnify risk due to the synergistic effects. Dose-response curves tailored to population vulnerability provide a basis for quantifying the synergistic risks of multiple stressors on specific measures of disease.
加州图拉雷县暴露于多种应激源的协同健康影响
摘要背景 图拉雷县位于加利福尼亚州中央山谷地区。它的人口暴露于压力源,包括高水平的空气、水和土壤污染,社会经济压力,以及难以获得可步行区域和健康食品。因此,与加州其他县相比,该人群的疾病负担较高。目的 我们假设环境和社会经济压力因素以复杂的方式相互作用,增加了图拉雷人口的疾病负担。方法 我们使用CalEnviroScreen选择图拉雷县作为研究对象,并表征了压力因素的地理相互作用。CalEnviroScreen指标为人口加权平均计算提供了基础,以确定图拉雷县最关键的环境和社会经济压力因素。我们还通过开源数据分析和解释了步行性和饮食获取。此外,我们将图拉雷县的疾病死亡率与加利福尼亚州的平均水平进行了比较。结果我们的评估显示,与加州其他许多人口普查区相比,图拉雷县人口暴露于环境压力因素的水平明显更高,特别是PM2.5、臭氧和饮用水质量。相对较高的社会经济压力会加重由此产生的健康影响。我们使用剂量-反应曲线和压力源映射来描述多重压力源如何增加人群的脆弱性和暴露于多重压力源的有效剂量。意义先前的健康影响研究已经将个体环境压力源与其各自的疾病措施联系起来。然而,许多社区继续每天暴露于许多压力源,这些压力源单独在监管范围内,但由于协同效应,可能会显着放大风险。针对人群脆弱性量身定制的剂量-反应曲线为量化多种应激源对特定疾病措施的协同风险提供了基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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