Alessio Gnerucci, Andrea Rossetto, Paola Faraoni, Francesco Ranaldi, Gabriele Cavallaro, Barbara Tonietti, Ugo Santosuosso, Lorella Bonaccorsi, Peiman Nazerian
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Fluctuations in emergency department (ED) utilization may be related to pollutant concentration variations that can heighten acute pathologies, exacerbate chronic conditions or indicate increased human activity. This study investigates the association between particulate matter (PM2.5-PM10) concentrations in patients' residential areas and ED visits. Retrospective, single-centre, time-series cohort study on a 100km2 urban area around a level 1 hospital in Florence, Italy, with 307,279 ED visits of patients of age > 14 years between 01/01/2019 and 31/12/2022. PM2.5 and PM10 daily concentrations, recorded by 14 air-quality stations, were interpolated at patients' residences, in a 250m2 grid, with inverse distance weighting and averaged on various time windows (lag) up to 30 days before ED visit. The association between ED visits and pollutant concentrations as percent excess of incidence rate (%Er) with 95% confidence intervals were investigated with generalized additive models. Significant association was found with short-term PM2.5 and PM10 fluctuations (PM2.5Lag1: 1.24%Er, 0.59-1.99 95%CI; PM10Lag2: 1.79%Er, 1.08-2.72). Such association was stronger for the subgroups of deceased patients (PM2.5Lag1 5.71%Er, 1.44-8.99; PM10Lag2 6.38%Er, 2.02-10.83), elderly patients presenting with dyspnoea (PM2.5Lag1 4.18%Er, 2.36-6.33; PM10Lag2 4.99%Er, 2.77-7.32) and younger patients suffering traumatic events (PM2.5Lag1 1.29%Er, 0.32-2.51; PM10Lag2 2.14%Er, 0.88-3.50). Exposure-response curves showed that particulate matter is associated with ED visits even at concentrations below the WHO guard levels. A short-term rise in PM2.5 and PM10, even below guard levels, was associated with increased ED utilization, particularly related to elderly patients with dyspnoea and the concomitant lurking occurrence of vehicle accidents in the younger population. Trial registration: NCT06491290; 09/07/2024; retrospectively registered.
期刊介绍:
Internal and Emergency Medicine (IEM) is an independent, international, English-language, peer-reviewed journal designed for internists and emergency physicians. IEM publishes a variety of manuscript types including Original investigations, Review articles, Letters to the Editor, Editorials and Commentaries. Occasionally IEM accepts unsolicited Reviews, Commentaries or Editorials. The journal is divided into three sections, i.e., Internal Medicine, Emergency Medicine and Clinical Evidence and Health Technology Assessment, with three separate editorial boards. In the Internal Medicine section, invited Case records and Physical examinations, devoted to underlining the role of a clinical approach in selected clinical cases, are also published. The Emergency Medicine section will include a Morbidity and Mortality Report and an Airway Forum concerning the management of difficult airway problems. As far as Critical Care is becoming an integral part of Emergency Medicine, a new sub-section will report the literature that concerns the interface not only for the care of the critical patient in the Emergency Department, but also in the Intensive Care Unit. Finally, in the Clinical Evidence and Health Technology Assessment section brief discussions of topics of evidence-based medicine (Cochrane’s corner) and Research updates are published. IEM encourages letters of rebuttal and criticism of published articles. Topics of interest include all subjects that relate to the science and practice of Internal and Emergency Medicine.