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New Homogeneous Spatial Areas Identified Using Case-Crossover Spatial Lag Grid Differences between Aerosol Optical Depth-PM(2.5) and Respiratory-Cardiovascular Emergency Department Visits and Hospitalizations

Optimal use of Hierarchical Bayesian Model (HBM)-assembled aerosol optical depth (AOD)-PM(2.5) fused surfaces in epidemiologic studies requires homogeneous temporal and spatial fused surfaces. No analytical method is available to evaluate spatial heterogeneity. The temporal case-crossover design was...

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Autores principales: Braggio, John T., Hall, Eric S., Weber, Stephanie A., Huff, Amy K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9393882/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36003277
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/atmos13050719
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author Braggio, John T.
Hall, Eric S.
Weber, Stephanie A.
Huff, Amy K.
author_facet Braggio, John T.
Hall, Eric S.
Weber, Stephanie A.
Huff, Amy K.
author_sort Braggio, John T.
collection PubMed
description Optimal use of Hierarchical Bayesian Model (HBM)-assembled aerosol optical depth (AOD)-PM(2.5) fused surfaces in epidemiologic studies requires homogeneous temporal and spatial fused surfaces. No analytical method is available to evaluate spatial heterogeneity. The temporal case-crossover design was modified to assess the spatial association between four experimental AOD-PM(2.5) fused surfaces and four respiratory–cardiovascular hospital events in 12 km(2) grids. The maximum number of adjacent lag grids with significant odds ratios (ORs) identified homogeneous spatial areas (HOSAs). The largest HOSA included five grids (lag grids 04; 720 km(2)) and the smallest HOSA contained two grids (lag grids 01; 288 km(2)). Emergency department asthma and inpatient asthma, myocardial infarction, and heart failure ORs were significantly higher in rural grids without air monitors than in urban grids with air monitors at lag grids 0, 1, and 01. Rural grids had higher AOD-PM(2.5) concentration levels, population density, and poverty percentages than urban grids. Warm season ORs were significantly higher than cold season ORs for all health outcomes at lag grids 0, 1, 01, and 04. The possibility of elevated fine and ultrafine PM and other demographic and environmental risk factors synergistically contributing to elevated respiratory–cardiovascular chronic diseases in persons residing in rural areas was discussed.
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spelling pubmed-93938822023-04-30 New Homogeneous Spatial Areas Identified Using Case-Crossover Spatial Lag Grid Differences between Aerosol Optical Depth-PM(2.5) and Respiratory-Cardiovascular Emergency Department Visits and Hospitalizations Braggio, John T. Hall, Eric S. Weber, Stephanie A. Huff, Amy K. Atmosphere (Basel) Article Optimal use of Hierarchical Bayesian Model (HBM)-assembled aerosol optical depth (AOD)-PM(2.5) fused surfaces in epidemiologic studies requires homogeneous temporal and spatial fused surfaces. No analytical method is available to evaluate spatial heterogeneity. The temporal case-crossover design was modified to assess the spatial association between four experimental AOD-PM(2.5) fused surfaces and four respiratory–cardiovascular hospital events in 12 km(2) grids. The maximum number of adjacent lag grids with significant odds ratios (ORs) identified homogeneous spatial areas (HOSAs). The largest HOSA included five grids (lag grids 04; 720 km(2)) and the smallest HOSA contained two grids (lag grids 01; 288 km(2)). Emergency department asthma and inpatient asthma, myocardial infarction, and heart failure ORs were significantly higher in rural grids without air monitors than in urban grids with air monitors at lag grids 0, 1, and 01. Rural grids had higher AOD-PM(2.5) concentration levels, population density, and poverty percentages than urban grids. Warm season ORs were significantly higher than cold season ORs for all health outcomes at lag grids 0, 1, 01, and 04. The possibility of elevated fine and ultrafine PM and other demographic and environmental risk factors synergistically contributing to elevated respiratory–cardiovascular chronic diseases in persons residing in rural areas was discussed. 2022-04-30 /pmc/articles/PMC9393882/ /pubmed/36003277 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/atmos13050719 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Braggio, John T.
Hall, Eric S.
Weber, Stephanie A.
Huff, Amy K.
New Homogeneous Spatial Areas Identified Using Case-Crossover Spatial Lag Grid Differences between Aerosol Optical Depth-PM(2.5) and Respiratory-Cardiovascular Emergency Department Visits and Hospitalizations
title New Homogeneous Spatial Areas Identified Using Case-Crossover Spatial Lag Grid Differences between Aerosol Optical Depth-PM(2.5) and Respiratory-Cardiovascular Emergency Department Visits and Hospitalizations
title_full New Homogeneous Spatial Areas Identified Using Case-Crossover Spatial Lag Grid Differences between Aerosol Optical Depth-PM(2.5) and Respiratory-Cardiovascular Emergency Department Visits and Hospitalizations
title_fullStr New Homogeneous Spatial Areas Identified Using Case-Crossover Spatial Lag Grid Differences between Aerosol Optical Depth-PM(2.5) and Respiratory-Cardiovascular Emergency Department Visits and Hospitalizations
title_full_unstemmed New Homogeneous Spatial Areas Identified Using Case-Crossover Spatial Lag Grid Differences between Aerosol Optical Depth-PM(2.5) and Respiratory-Cardiovascular Emergency Department Visits and Hospitalizations
title_short New Homogeneous Spatial Areas Identified Using Case-Crossover Spatial Lag Grid Differences between Aerosol Optical Depth-PM(2.5) and Respiratory-Cardiovascular Emergency Department Visits and Hospitalizations
title_sort new homogeneous spatial areas identified using case-crossover spatial lag grid differences between aerosol optical depth-pm(2.5) and respiratory-cardiovascular emergency department visits and hospitalizations
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9393882/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36003277
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/atmos13050719
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