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Short-Term Ambient Particulate Air Pollution and Hospitalization Expenditures of Cause-Specific Cardiorespiratory Diseases in China: A Multicity Analysis

BACKGROUND: Ambient air pollution is leading risk factor for health burden in China. Few studies in China have investigated the economic loss related to short-term exposure to ambient PM(2.5), which could trigger acute onset of cardiorespiratory diseases within a few days. METHODS: Daily ambient air...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Xie, Yang, Li, Zichuan, Zhong, Hua, Feng, Xing Lin, Lu, Pantao, Xu, Zhouyang, Guo, Tongjun, Si, Yaqin, Wang, Jinxi, Chen, Libo, Wei, Chen, Deng, Furong, Baccarelli, Andrea A., Zheng, Zhijie, Guo, Xinbiao, Wu, Shaowei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8342975/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34528013
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lanwpc.2021.100232
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Ambient air pollution is leading risk factor for health burden in China. Few studies in China have investigated the economic loss related to short-term exposure to ambient PM(2.5), which could trigger acute onset of cardiorespiratory diseases within a few days. METHODS: Daily ambient air pollutants data are obtained for each city from the National Air Quality Monitoring System and daily hospitalization data are obtained from the urban employee-based basic medical insurance scheme database in 74 Chinese cities with an average coverage of 88.5 million urban employees during 2016-2017. A three-stage time-series analytic approach is used in this study to investigate the impact of short-term exposure to ambient fine particulate (PM(2.5)) air pollution on hospital admissions, expenses and hospital stays of three cause-specific cardiorespiratory diseases, including lower respiratory infections (LRI), coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke in the included cities. FINDINGS: Based on the time-series analysis using daily hospitalization data, 28,560 LRI cases, 54,600 CHD cases, and 23,989 stroke cases are attributable to ambient PM(2.5) in the 74 cities during the study period, and the related attributable expenses are 220 million CNY (US$ 32.9 million) for LRI, 458 million CNY (US$ 68.5 million) for CHD, and 410 million CNY (US$ 65.8 million) for stroke, respectively. These attributable numbers account for 1.45% to 2.05% of total hospital admissions and 1.10% to 1.51% of total expenses for the three diseases during 2016-2017, respectively. The attributable numbers for the three cause-specific cardiorespiratory diseases would increase to 362,007 hospital admission cases and 3.68 billion CNY expenses ($US550 million) in the entire urban employee population (299 million) in China during 2016-2017, and the related direct economic loss of absence from work would be 798 million CNY (US$ 119.3 million). INTERPRETATION: Our results support that short-term exposure to ambient PM(2.5) pollution could lead to significant health and economic impacts in China. Reducing levels of ambient PM(2.5) can avoid substantial health damage and expenditures, and generate appreciable economic benefits from decreasing absence from work. FUNDING: Natural Science Foundation of China (82073509, 71903010, 71903011), and the National Key Research and Development Program of China (2017YFC0211600, 2017YFC0211601).