爱尔兰空气污染控制对死亡率和住院率的影响。

Douglas W Dockery, David Q Rich, Patrick G Goodman, Luke Clancy, Pamela Ohman-Strickland, Prethibha George, Tania Kotlov
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在1980年代,爱尔兰共和国经历了多次严重的污染事件。家庭燃煤是这种污染的主要来源。1990年,爱尔兰政府颁布了一项禁令,禁止在都柏林销售、销售和分销煤炭。该禁令于1995年扩展到科克,1998年和2000年扩展到其他10个社区。我们以前报道过,在1990年禁煤后,都柏林的微粒黑烟(BS*)和二氧化硫(SO2)浓度(以总气态酸度衡量)有所下降(Clancy等,2002年)。在目前的研究中,我们探讨并比较了1990年、1995年和1998年相继颁布的禁令在减少社区空气污染和改善公众健康方面的有效性。我们收集了1981年至2004年都柏林郡(1990年禁令)、科克郡(1995年禁令)和利默里克、劳斯、韦克斯福德和威克洛郡(1998年禁令)的每日BS、总气态酸度(SO2)和死因特异性死亡计数的记录。我们还汇编了科克郡自治市(1991年至2004年)和利默里克、劳斯、韦克斯福德和威克洛县(1993年至2004年)心血管、呼吸和消化诊断的每日住院人数。我们比较了禁令前和禁令后每个城市的BS和SO2浓度。使用中断时间序列方法,我们估计了在相应的地方煤炭禁令后,每个城市或县特定原因的直接标准化死亡率的变化。我们将每周年龄和性别标准化死亡率与禁令前后的指标进行了回归,调整了流感流行、每周平均温度和沿海县标准化死亡率的季节平滑(可能不受禁令影响)。我们将这些结果与米德兰兹郡的类似分析结果进行了比较,这些县可能也没有受到禁令的影响。我们还估计了1995年和1998年禁令后,每个城市或县的具体原因、直接标准化、每周住院率标准化的变化,并对流感流行、每周平均气温和当地消化诊断入院率进行了调整。与禁令前相比,禁令后所有受影响人口中心的平均BS浓度均有所下降,下降幅度为4至35微克/立方米(分别对应于45%至70%的减少),但我们观察到与禁令相关的二氧化硫总气态酸度测量没有明确的模式。与禁令实施前相比,1990年(减少1%)、1995年(减少4%)或1998年(减少0%)禁令没有显著降低总死亡率,心血管死亡率也没有显著降低(1990年、1995年和1998年禁令分别减少0%、4%和1%)。呼吸系统死亡率与禁令相关(分别降低17%、9%和3%)。我们发现,与1995年禁令相关的心血管疾病住院率下降了4%,与1998年禁令相关的心血管疾病住院率下降了3%。禁令实施后,因呼吸系统疾病入院的人数并没有持续下降;因肺炎、慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)和哮喘入院的人数有所减少。然而,少报住院数据和缺乏控制和比较系列削弱了我们对这些结果的信心。连续的禁煤令使每个城镇的颗粒物浓度立即持续下降;在冬季和采暖季减少幅度最大。禁令与呼吸系统死亡率的降低有关,但没有发现心血管死亡率的改善。呼吸系统和心血管疾病住院率的变化支持这些发现,但不能被认为是证实。即使在空气质量明显改善的情况下,如在这种情况下,在同一健康指标同时出现长期改善的情况下,仍然很难发现与之相关的公共卫生指标的变化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Effect of air pollution control on mortality and hospital admissions in Ireland.

During the 1980s the Republic of Ireland experienced repeated severe pollution episodes. Domestic coal burning was a major source of this pollution. In 1990 the Irish government introduced a ban on the marketing, sale, and distribution of coal in Dublin. The ban was extended to Cork in 1995 and to 10 other communities in 1998 and 2000. We previously reported decreases in particulate black smoke (BS*) and sulfur dioxide (SO2) concentrations, measured as total gaseous acidity, in Dublin after the 1990 coal ban (Clancy et al. 2002). In the current study we explored and compared the effectiveness of the sequential 1990, 1995, and 1998 bans in reducing community air pollution and in improving public health. We compiled records of daily BS, total gaseous acidity (SO2), and counts of cause-specific deaths from 1981 to 2004 for Dublin County Borough (1990 ban), county Cork (1995 ban), and counties Limerick, Louth, Wexford, and Wicklow (1998 ban). We also compiled daily counts of hospital admissions for cardiovascular, respiratory, and digestive diagnoses for Cork County Borough (1991 to 2004) and counties Limerick, Louth, Wexford, and Wicklow (1993 to 2004). We compared pre-ban and post-ban BS and SO2 concentrations for each city. Using interrupted time-series methods, we estimated the change in cause-specific, directly standardized mortality rates in each city or county after the corresponding local coal ban. We regressed weekly age- and sex-standardized mortality rates against an indicator of the post- versus pre-ban period, adjusting for influenza epidemics, weekly mean temperature, and a season smooth of the standardized mortality rates in Coastal counties presumably not affected by the bans. We compared these results with similar analyses in Midlands counties also presumably unaffected by the bans. We also estimated the change in cause-specific, directly standardized, weekly hospital admissions rates normalized for underreporting in each city or county after the 1995 and 1998 bans, adjusting for influenza epidemics, weekly mean temperature, and local admissions for digestive diagnoses. Mean BS concentrations fell in all affected population centers post-ban compared with the pre-ban period, with decreases ranging from 4 to 35 microg/m3 (corresponding to reductions of 45% to 70%, respectively), but we observed no clear pattern in SO2 measured as total gaseous acidity associated with the bans. In comparisons with the pre-ban periods, no significant reduction was found in total death rates associated with the 1990 (1% reduction), 1995 (4% reduction), or 1998 (0% reduction) bans, nor for cardiovascular mortality (0%, 4%, and 1% reductions for the 1990, 1995, and 1998 bans, respectively). Respiratory mortality was reduced in association with the bans (17%, 9%, and 3%, respectively). We found a 4% decrease in hospital admissions for cardiovascular disease associated with the 1995 ban and a 3% decrease with the 1998 ban. Admissions for respiratory disease were not consistently lower after the bans; admissions for pneumonia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and asthma were reduced. However, underreporting of hospital admissions data and lack of control and comparison series tempered our confidence in these results. The successive coal bans resulted in immediate and sustained decreases in particulate concentrations in each city or town; with the largest decreases in winter and during the heating season. The bans were associated with reductions in respiratory mortality but no detectable improvement in cardiovascular mortality. The changes in hospital admissions for respiratory and cardiovascular disease were supportive of these findings but cannot be considered confirming. Detecting changes in public health indicators associated even with clear improvements in air quality, as in this case, remains difficult when there are simultaneous secular improvements in the same health indicators.

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