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Reanalysis of the effects of air pollution on daily mortality in Seoul, Korea: A case-crossover design.

We used the case-crossover design to identify any increase in mortality in Seoul, Korea, when there were higher levels of ambient air pollution on case-days than would be expected solely as a result of chance. This empirical study showed that either unidirectional retrospective (selecting only contr...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lee, J T, Schwartz, J
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1999
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1566500/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10417360
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author Lee, J T
Schwartz, J
author_facet Lee, J T
Schwartz, J
author_sort Lee, J T
collection PubMed
description We used the case-crossover design to identify any increase in mortality in Seoul, Korea, when there were higher levels of ambient air pollution on case-days than would be expected solely as a result of chance. This empirical study showed that either unidirectional retrospective (selecting only control days prior to death) or prospective (selecting only control days after death) control sampling could cause risk estimates to be confounded by seasonal waves as well as time trends in air pollution levels. In bidirectional control sampling in which exposures at death were compared with exposures both before and after death, the estimated mortality was resistant to confounding by time patterns of air pollution. Using a bidirectional control sampling approach, the results from a conditional logistic regression model controlling for weather conditions showed that the nonaccidental mortality associated with a 50-ppb increment over a 3-day moving average of SO(2) concentrations, including the concurrent day and preceding 2 days, was 1.023 [95% confidence interval (CI), 1.016-1.084]. The relative risk of death was 1.023 (CI, 0.999-1.048) per 50 ppb for 1-hr maximum O(3) and 1.010 (CI, 0.988-1.032) per 100 microg/m(3 )or total suspended particulates. In conclusion, the findings of this study were 2-fold: given the consistency of the observed association between SO(2) and daily mortality across different analysis methods, the association reported here indicates that air pollution is a probable contributor to premature death; and bidirectional control sampling is needed in a case-crossover design applied to air pollution epidemiologic studies to control confounding by seasonal patterns of air pollution as well as time trends.
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spelling pubmed-15665002006-09-19 Reanalysis of the effects of air pollution on daily mortality in Seoul, Korea: A case-crossover design. Lee, J T Schwartz, J Environ Health Perspect Research Article We used the case-crossover design to identify any increase in mortality in Seoul, Korea, when there were higher levels of ambient air pollution on case-days than would be expected solely as a result of chance. This empirical study showed that either unidirectional retrospective (selecting only control days prior to death) or prospective (selecting only control days after death) control sampling could cause risk estimates to be confounded by seasonal waves as well as time trends in air pollution levels. In bidirectional control sampling in which exposures at death were compared with exposures both before and after death, the estimated mortality was resistant to confounding by time patterns of air pollution. Using a bidirectional control sampling approach, the results from a conditional logistic regression model controlling for weather conditions showed that the nonaccidental mortality associated with a 50-ppb increment over a 3-day moving average of SO(2) concentrations, including the concurrent day and preceding 2 days, was 1.023 [95% confidence interval (CI), 1.016-1.084]. The relative risk of death was 1.023 (CI, 0.999-1.048) per 50 ppb for 1-hr maximum O(3) and 1.010 (CI, 0.988-1.032) per 100 microg/m(3 )or total suspended particulates. In conclusion, the findings of this study were 2-fold: given the consistency of the observed association between SO(2) and daily mortality across different analysis methods, the association reported here indicates that air pollution is a probable contributor to premature death; and bidirectional control sampling is needed in a case-crossover design applied to air pollution epidemiologic studies to control confounding by seasonal patterns of air pollution as well as time trends. 1999-08 /pmc/articles/PMC1566500/ /pubmed/10417360 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Lee, J T
Schwartz, J
Reanalysis of the effects of air pollution on daily mortality in Seoul, Korea: A case-crossover design.
title Reanalysis of the effects of air pollution on daily mortality in Seoul, Korea: A case-crossover design.
title_full Reanalysis of the effects of air pollution on daily mortality in Seoul, Korea: A case-crossover design.
title_fullStr Reanalysis of the effects of air pollution on daily mortality in Seoul, Korea: A case-crossover design.
title_full_unstemmed Reanalysis of the effects of air pollution on daily mortality in Seoul, Korea: A case-crossover design.
title_short Reanalysis of the effects of air pollution on daily mortality in Seoul, Korea: A case-crossover design.
title_sort reanalysis of the effects of air pollution on daily mortality in seoul, korea: a case-crossover design.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1566500/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10417360
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