Health Impacts from PM2.5 Exposure Using Environmental Epidemiology and Health Risk Assessment: A Review

Q3 Environmental Science
Thanakon Sukuman, K. Ueda, Sarunya Sujaritpong, H. Praekunatham, Kornwipa Punnasiri, Tuangsit Wimuktayon, T. Prapaspongsa
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Abstract

Exposure to PM2.5 has been known to cause a variety of serious health consequences. Quantifying and investigating the health effects of PM2.5 pollution are imperative to understand and collect scientific evidences for supporting policies and associated actions. In this paper, we reviewed published environ-mental epidemiological studies and health risk assessments evaluating the health impacts of PM2.5 exposure in the PubMed database to identify the attributes of each method and aggregate the health impact results to perform analyses and summaries. Forty-two studies were identified after applying our search strategy, inclusion, and exclusion criteria. The epidemiological studies found an increased risk of several diseases from short- and long-term exposure, such as cardiovas-cular and respiratory diseases, lung cancer, stroke, pneumonia, depression, and diabetes. However, several conditions remain to be explored as the associations remain unclear, such as asthma, bronchitis, breast cancer, Parkinson’s disease for long-term exposure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, stillbirth, and hypertension for short-term exposure. Health risk assessment (HRA) studies at a global scale found more than 4 million deaths from diseases associated with PM2.5 exposure. These studies also emphasized the importance and benefits of health guidelines that demonstrated to help avoid the number of fatalities significantly, especially guidelines from the World Health Organization (WHO) that showed the highest benefit. HRA studies in Thailand also showed that the country's air quality needs to be improved to avoid deaths and hospital admission cases. We also found that cohort studies for the Thai population are required to improve the quality of data and limit overestimation from using global estimates. Finally, the benefits and limitations of each study approach were collated to assist future studies in determining the most suited instruments for their purposes.
基于环境流行病学和健康风险评估的PM2.5暴露对健康的影响
众所周知,暴露在PM2.5中会导致各种严重的健康后果。量化和调查PM2.5污染对健康的影响对于理解和收集支持政策和相关行动的科学证据至关重要。在本文中,我们回顾了PubMed数据库中已发表的评估PM2.5暴露对健康影响的环境流行病学研究和健康风险评估,以确定每种方法的属性,并汇总健康影响结果进行分析和总结。在应用我们的搜索策略、纳入和排除标准后,确定了42项研究。流行病学研究发现,短期和长期接触会增加几种疾病的风险,如心血管和呼吸系统疾病、肺癌、中风、肺炎、抑郁症和糖尿病。然而,由于其相关性尚不清楚,一些情况仍有待探索,如长期暴露的哮喘、支气管炎、乳腺癌、帕金森病、慢性阻塞性肺病、死产和短期暴露的高血压。全球范围内的健康风险评估(HRA)研究发现,有400多万人死于与PM2.5接触有关的疾病。这些研究还强调了证明有助于大大避免死亡人数的健康准则的重要性和益处,特别是世界卫生组织(世卫组织)的准则显示了最大的益处。HRA在泰国的研究也表明,需要改善该国的空气质量,以避免死亡和住院病例。我们还发现,需要对泰国人群进行队列研究,以提高数据质量,并限制使用全球估计值的高估。最后,对每种研究方法的优点和局限性进行了整理,以帮助未来的研究确定最适合其目的的工具。
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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来源期刊
Applied Environmental Research
Applied Environmental Research Environmental Science-Environmental Science (all)
CiteScore
2.00
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