不同气候情景下奥地利因臭氧造成的死亡人数。

IF 3.7 3区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Hanns Moshammer, Monika Mayer, Harald Rieder, Christian Schmidt, Birgit Bednar-Friedl, Peter Wallner, Hans-Peter Hutter
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对流层臭氧是一种空气污染物,在欧洲造成了公共健康问题。气候变化会增加臭氧的形成。利用过去和预测的年度总(全因)死亡率数据以及模拟的每日臭氧浓度,我们进行了一次全国范围的健康影响评估,估算奥地利每年与臭氧有关的(可归因)死亡人数。我们对不同的方法进行了比较。估算基于臭氧的最大 1 小时平均值。从 2045 年到 2055 年的十年间,由于人口发展趋势,奥地利将有更多人死亡。因此,更多的死亡也将归因于臭氧。较高的温室气体排放情景(例如,与 RCP2.6 相比,代表性浓度途径 RCP8.5)将导致更多与臭氧相关的死亡,这主要是由于国家的臭氧前体排放(每年 250-340 例的差异,取决于模型),但在较小程度上是由于全球气候变化。可归因死亡人数的增加将主要受到国家而非全球减缓措施的影响。国家减排肯定会对当地大气化学、空气质量和公共健康产生强大而有益的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Attributable deaths in Austria due to ozone under different climate scenarios.

Tropospheric ozone is an air pollutant that poses a public health problem in Europe. Climate change could increase the formation of ozone. Applying past and predicted annual total (all-cause) mortality data and modeled daily ozone concentrations, we performed a nationwide health impact assessment estimating annual ozone-related (attributable) deaths in Austria. Different approaches were compared. Estimates were based on maximal 1-h averages of ozone. Until the decade from 2045 till 2055, more people will die in Austria because of the demographic trends. Therefore, more deaths will also be attributable to ozone. Higher greenhouse gas emission scenarios (e.g. Representative Concentration Pathway RCP8.5 compared to RCP2.6) will lead to more ozone-related deaths, mostly due to the national emission of ozone precursors (a difference of 250-340 cases per year, depending on the model), but to a lesser extent because of global climate change. Increases in attributable deaths will be affected mostly by national, not global mitigation measures. National emission reduction will certainly have a strong and beneficial effect on local atmospheric chemistry, air quality, and public health.

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来源期刊
European Journal of Public Health
European Journal of Public Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
2.30%
发文量
2039
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The European Journal of Public Health (EJPH) is a multidisciplinary journal aimed at attracting contributions from epidemiology, health services research, health economics, social sciences, management sciences, ethics and law, environmental health sciences, and other disciplines of relevance to public health. The journal provides a forum for discussion and debate of current international public health issues, with a focus on the European Region. Bi-monthly issues contain peer-reviewed original articles, editorials, commentaries, book reviews, news, letters to the editor, announcements of events, and various other features.
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