Air Quality Health Index in primary care: A feasibility study

IF 1.5 Q3 RESPIRATORY SYSTEM
Ross E. G. Upshur, A. Abelsohn, A. D’Urzo, B. O’Neill, Farhan M. Asrar, S. B. Hashemi, Sheena Melwani, B. Aliarzadeh
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Abstract

Abstract Rationale: Exposure to poor air quality is associated with increased morbidity and mortality in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), asthma and heart failure. A number of countries, including Canada, report utilization of the Air Quality Health Index (AQHI) and associated health messages tailored to different AQHI categories for the public and at-risk populations to reduce exposure, adjust physical activity and optimize clinical management. Studies indicate AQHI advisories may not adequately reach or inform at-risk populations. Objectives: The objectives of this study were to design a text alert system and evaluate the feasibility of delivering AQHI forecast alerts to participants when AQHI readings exceeded low health risk. Secondary and tertiary objectives were to determine the frequency and accuracy of the alerts. Methods: Feasibility was assessed by the following steps: recruiting older adults with asthma, COPD and heart failure from primary care practices; developing software for extracting AQHI data from the Health Canada database; registering patients on the automatic dispatch messages system; and automatically sending AQHI forecast alerts of moderate health risk or above to participants’ cell-phones the preceding night. Results: We successfully queried the Environment Canada database, detected AQHI alerts and delivered them to participants. Forecast alerts of moderate health risk were higher in summer and winter 2018-2019 in the study areas. The accuracy of AQHI forecast alerts for North Toronto versus Downtown Toronto were 81.7% (75.9 − 86.6%) and 80.7% (74.8 − 85.7%), respectively. Conclusions: Delivering AQHI alerts through text messages to patients in the primary care setting was feasible. Colder seasons should not be underestimated for moderate risk AQHI conditions.
初级保健的空气质量健康指数:可行性研究
理由:暴露于较差的空气质量与慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)、哮喘和心力衰竭患者的发病率和死亡率增加有关。包括加拿大在内的一些国家报告使用空气质量健康指数(空气质量健康指数)和针对不同空气质量健康指数类别为公众和风险人群量身定制的相关健康信息,以减少接触、调整身体活动和优化临床管理。研究表明,空气卫生健康咨询可能无法充分覆盖或告知高危人群。目的:本研究的目的是设计一个文本警报系统,并评估当AQHI读数超过低健康风险时向参与者提供AQHI预报警报的可行性。第二和第三目标是确定警报的频率和准确性。方法:通过以下步骤评估可行性:从初级保健实践中招募患有哮喘、慢性阻塞性肺病和心力衰竭的老年人;开发从加拿大卫生部数据库提取空气卫生指数数据的软件;在自动调度信息系统上登记病人;并在前一天晚上自动向参与者的手机发送中度或以上健康风险的空气质量卫生指数预报警报。结果:我们成功地查询了加拿大环境部的数据库,检测到AQHI警报并将其发送给参与者。2018-2019年夏季和冬季,研究区中度健康风险预报警报较高。多伦多北部和多伦多市中心的AQHI预报预警准确率分别为81.7%(75.9 ~ 86.6%)和80.7%(74.8 ~ 85.7%)。结论:通过短信向初级保健机构的患者传递AQHI警报是可行的。对于中度危险的空气质量健康状况,不应低估寒冷季节。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
12.50%
发文量
51
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