Richard V Remigio, Heather H Burris, Jane E Clougherty
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Air pollution has been associated with adverse birth outcomes, with variation by socioeconomic position (SEP). However, it remains unknown which aspects of lower SEP - comprised of myriad physical and psychosocial stressors - may best explain observed pollution susceptibilities. Building upon previous studies that estimated joint associations of air pollution and socioeconomic deprivation on term birth weight in New York City (NYC), this study seeks to identify specific social stressors underlying that relationship.
Methods: We examined records for 243,853 term births in NYC from 2007-2010. Residence-specific pregnancy-average NO2 was estimated using NYC Community Air Survey (NYCCAS) and EPA regulatory data. Twenty-six community social stressor indicators were tested as modifiers of NO2-birthweight associations in linear mixed-effects models, adjusting for particulate matter (PM2.5), individual-level maternal characteristics, and other covariates. In sensitivity analyses, we also examined non-linear interactions between continuous NO2 and census-tract level violence and deprivation terms.
Results: Consistent with previous work, a 1-IQR (6.2 ppb) increase in average prenatal NO2 exposure was associated with a 12.6 (SE = 2.7)-gram decrease in term birthweight.We observed similar values in independent models for most stressors related to violent crime or SEP and significantly lower birthweights with higher stressor exposures. In models of effect modification, however, we found that - despite lower average birthweights in high-stressor communities - NO2-birthweight associations were weaker in higher-stressor communities, particularly for violence-related stressors. For example, in the highest-quartile communities for assault, a 1-IQR increase in NO2 exhibited a decrement of only 7.3 g, on average, compared to 16.9 g in the lowest-assault quartile (p = .01 trend across quartiles). Exposures to non-violent stressors were not significantly associated with lower birthweights, nor modified observed NO2-birthweight associations.
Conclusions: We found significantly lower term-infant birthweights with higher NO2 or community stressors. Counter to hypotheses, however, in communities with very high stressor exposures (esp. violent crimes), despite lower overall birthweights, associations for NO2 were weaker than in low-stressor communities. Our results suggest a possible saturation effect in stress-pollution interactions, wherein very high stressor exposures appear to overwhelm any effects of pollution. In addition, we observed stronger effects for violent crimes, in relation to other social stressors.
期刊介绍:
Environmental Health publishes manuscripts on all aspects of environmental and occupational medicine and related studies in toxicology and epidemiology.
Environmental Health is aimed at scientists and practitioners in all areas of environmental science where human health and well-being are involved, either directly or indirectly. Environmental Health is a public health journal serving the public health community and scientists working on matters of public health interest and importance pertaining to the environment.