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Do Waste Incinerators Induce Adverse Respiratory Effects? An Air Quality and Epidemiological Study of Six Communities

The purpose of the study presented here was to simultaneously measure air quality and respiratory function and symptoms in populations living in the neighborhood of waste incinerators and to estimate the contribution of incinerator emissions to the particulate air mass in these neighborhoods. We stu...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shy, Carl M., Degnan, Darrah, Fox, Donald L., Mukerjee, Shaibal, Hazucha, Milan J., Boehlecke, Brian A., Rothenbacher, Dietrich, Briggs, Patsy M., Devlin, Robert B., Wallace, Dennis D., Stevens, Robert K., Bromberg, Philip A.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1995
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1523507/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7588484
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author Shy, Carl M.
Degnan, Darrah
Fox, Donald L.
Mukerjee, Shaibal
Hazucha, Milan J.
Boehlecke, Brian A.
Rothenbacher, Dietrich
Briggs, Patsy M.
Devlin, Robert B.
Wallace, Dennis D.
Stevens, Robert K.
Bromberg, Philip A.
author_facet Shy, Carl M.
Degnan, Darrah
Fox, Donald L.
Mukerjee, Shaibal
Hazucha, Milan J.
Boehlecke, Brian A.
Rothenbacher, Dietrich
Briggs, Patsy M.
Devlin, Robert B.
Wallace, Dennis D.
Stevens, Robert K.
Bromberg, Philip A.
author_sort Shy, Carl M.
collection PubMed
description The purpose of the study presented here was to simultaneously measure air quality and respiratory function and symptoms in populations living in the neighborhood of waste incinerators and to estimate the contribution of incinerator emissions to the particulate air mass in these neighborhoods. We studied the residents of three communities having, respectively, a biomedical and a municipal incinerator, and a liquid hazardous waste-burning industrial furnace. We compared results with three matched-comparison communities. We did not detect differences in concentrations of particulate matter among any of the three pairs of study communities. Average fine particulate (PM(2.5)) concentrations measured for 35 days varied across study communities from 16 to 32 μg/m(3). Within the same community, daily concentrations of fine particulates varied by as much as eightfold, from 10 to 80 μg/m(3), and were nearly identical within each pair of communities. Direct measurements of air quality and estimates based on a chemical mass balance receptor model showed that incinerator emissions did not have a major or even a modest impact on routinely monitored air pollutants. A one-time baseline descriptive survey (n = 6963) did not reveal consistent community differences in the prevalence of chronic or acute respiratory symptoms between incinerator and comparison communities, nor did we see a difference in baseline lung function tests or in the average peak expiratory flow rate measured over a period of 35 days. Based on this analysis of the first year of our study, we conclude that we have no evidence to reject the null hypothesis of no acute or chronic respiratory effects associated with residence in any of the three incinerator communities.
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spelling pubmed-15235072006-07-28 Do Waste Incinerators Induce Adverse Respiratory Effects? An Air Quality and Epidemiological Study of Six Communities Shy, Carl M. Degnan, Darrah Fox, Donald L. Mukerjee, Shaibal Hazucha, Milan J. Boehlecke, Brian A. Rothenbacher, Dietrich Briggs, Patsy M. Devlin, Robert B. Wallace, Dennis D. Stevens, Robert K. Bromberg, Philip A. Environ Health Perspect Articles The purpose of the study presented here was to simultaneously measure air quality and respiratory function and symptoms in populations living in the neighborhood of waste incinerators and to estimate the contribution of incinerator emissions to the particulate air mass in these neighborhoods. We studied the residents of three communities having, respectively, a biomedical and a municipal incinerator, and a liquid hazardous waste-burning industrial furnace. We compared results with three matched-comparison communities. We did not detect differences in concentrations of particulate matter among any of the three pairs of study communities. Average fine particulate (PM(2.5)) concentrations measured for 35 days varied across study communities from 16 to 32 μg/m(3). Within the same community, daily concentrations of fine particulates varied by as much as eightfold, from 10 to 80 μg/m(3), and were nearly identical within each pair of communities. Direct measurements of air quality and estimates based on a chemical mass balance receptor model showed that incinerator emissions did not have a major or even a modest impact on routinely monitored air pollutants. A one-time baseline descriptive survey (n = 6963) did not reveal consistent community differences in the prevalence of chronic or acute respiratory symptoms between incinerator and comparison communities, nor did we see a difference in baseline lung function tests or in the average peak expiratory flow rate measured over a period of 35 days. Based on this analysis of the first year of our study, we conclude that we have no evidence to reject the null hypothesis of no acute or chronic respiratory effects associated with residence in any of the three incinerator communities. 1995 /pmc/articles/PMC1523507/ /pubmed/7588484 Text en
spellingShingle Articles
Shy, Carl M.
Degnan, Darrah
Fox, Donald L.
Mukerjee, Shaibal
Hazucha, Milan J.
Boehlecke, Brian A.
Rothenbacher, Dietrich
Briggs, Patsy M.
Devlin, Robert B.
Wallace, Dennis D.
Stevens, Robert K.
Bromberg, Philip A.
Do Waste Incinerators Induce Adverse Respiratory Effects? An Air Quality and Epidemiological Study of Six Communities
title Do Waste Incinerators Induce Adverse Respiratory Effects? An Air Quality and Epidemiological Study of Six Communities
title_full Do Waste Incinerators Induce Adverse Respiratory Effects? An Air Quality and Epidemiological Study of Six Communities
title_fullStr Do Waste Incinerators Induce Adverse Respiratory Effects? An Air Quality and Epidemiological Study of Six Communities
title_full_unstemmed Do Waste Incinerators Induce Adverse Respiratory Effects? An Air Quality and Epidemiological Study of Six Communities
title_short Do Waste Incinerators Induce Adverse Respiratory Effects? An Air Quality and Epidemiological Study of Six Communities
title_sort do waste incinerators induce adverse respiratory effects? an air quality and epidemiological study of six communities
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1523507/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7588484
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