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Children's respiratory morbidity prevalence in relation to air pollution in four Chinese cities.

We examined respiratory health effects of long-term exposure to ambient air pollution in 7,621 schoolchildren residing in eight districts of four Chinese cities. The four cities exhibited wide between-city and within-city gradients in ambient levels of four size fractions of particulate matter [less...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Junfeng Jim, Hu, Wei, Wei, Fusheng, Wu, Guoping, Korn, Leo R, Chapman, Robert S
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2002
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1240998/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12204833
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author Zhang, Junfeng Jim
Hu, Wei
Wei, Fusheng
Wu, Guoping
Korn, Leo R
Chapman, Robert S
author_facet Zhang, Junfeng Jim
Hu, Wei
Wei, Fusheng
Wu, Guoping
Korn, Leo R
Chapman, Robert S
author_sort Zhang, Junfeng Jim
collection PubMed
description We examined respiratory health effects of long-term exposure to ambient air pollution in 7,621 schoolchildren residing in eight districts of four Chinese cities. The four cities exhibited wide between-city and within-city gradients in ambient levels of four size fractions of particulate matter [less than or equal to 2.5 micro m in aerodynamic diameter (PM(2.5)), between 2.5 and 10 micro m (PM(10-2.5)), less than or equal to 10 micro m (PM(10)), and total suspended particulates (TSP)] and two gaseous pollutants (SO(2) and NO(x)). Informed consent and written responses to questionnaires about children's personal, residential, and family information, as well as their health histories and status, were obtained with the help of the parents and the school personnel. We used a two-stage regression approach in data analyses. In the first-stage logistic regressions, we obtained logits of district-specific prevalence of wheeze, asthma, bronchitis, hospitalization for respiratory diseases, persistent cough, and persistent phlegm, adjusted for covariates representing personal, household, and family parameters. Some of these covariates were found to be risk factors of children's respiratory health, including being younger in the study group, being male, having been breast-fed, sharing bedrooms, sharing beds, room being smoky during cooking, eye irritation during cooking, parental smoking, and a history of parental asthma. In several of the second-stage variance-weighted linear regressions, we examined associations between district-specific adjusted prevalence rates and district-specific ambient levels of each pollutant. We found positive associations between morbidity prevalence and outdoor levels of PM of all size fractions, but the association appeared to be stronger for coarse particles (PM(10-2.5)). The results also present some evidence that ambient levels of NO(x) and SO(2) were positively associated with children's respiratory symptoms, but the evidence for these two gaseous pollutants appeared to be weaker than that for the PM.
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spelling pubmed-12409982005-11-08 Children's respiratory morbidity prevalence in relation to air pollution in four Chinese cities. Zhang, Junfeng Jim Hu, Wei Wei, Fusheng Wu, Guoping Korn, Leo R Chapman, Robert S Environ Health Perspect Research Article We examined respiratory health effects of long-term exposure to ambient air pollution in 7,621 schoolchildren residing in eight districts of four Chinese cities. The four cities exhibited wide between-city and within-city gradients in ambient levels of four size fractions of particulate matter [less than or equal to 2.5 micro m in aerodynamic diameter (PM(2.5)), between 2.5 and 10 micro m (PM(10-2.5)), less than or equal to 10 micro m (PM(10)), and total suspended particulates (TSP)] and two gaseous pollutants (SO(2) and NO(x)). Informed consent and written responses to questionnaires about children's personal, residential, and family information, as well as their health histories and status, were obtained with the help of the parents and the school personnel. We used a two-stage regression approach in data analyses. In the first-stage logistic regressions, we obtained logits of district-specific prevalence of wheeze, asthma, bronchitis, hospitalization for respiratory diseases, persistent cough, and persistent phlegm, adjusted for covariates representing personal, household, and family parameters. Some of these covariates were found to be risk factors of children's respiratory health, including being younger in the study group, being male, having been breast-fed, sharing bedrooms, sharing beds, room being smoky during cooking, eye irritation during cooking, parental smoking, and a history of parental asthma. In several of the second-stage variance-weighted linear regressions, we examined associations between district-specific adjusted prevalence rates and district-specific ambient levels of each pollutant. We found positive associations between morbidity prevalence and outdoor levels of PM of all size fractions, but the association appeared to be stronger for coarse particles (PM(10-2.5)). The results also present some evidence that ambient levels of NO(x) and SO(2) were positively associated with children's respiratory symptoms, but the evidence for these two gaseous pollutants appeared to be weaker than that for the PM. 2002-09 /pmc/articles/PMC1240998/ /pubmed/12204833 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Zhang, Junfeng Jim
Hu, Wei
Wei, Fusheng
Wu, Guoping
Korn, Leo R
Chapman, Robert S
Children's respiratory morbidity prevalence in relation to air pollution in four Chinese cities.
title Children's respiratory morbidity prevalence in relation to air pollution in four Chinese cities.
title_full Children's respiratory morbidity prevalence in relation to air pollution in four Chinese cities.
title_fullStr Children's respiratory morbidity prevalence in relation to air pollution in four Chinese cities.
title_full_unstemmed Children's respiratory morbidity prevalence in relation to air pollution in four Chinese cities.
title_short Children's respiratory morbidity prevalence in relation to air pollution in four Chinese cities.
title_sort children's respiratory morbidity prevalence in relation to air pollution in four chinese cities.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1240998/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12204833
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