Ambient air quality and the effects of air pollutants on otolaryngology in Beijing
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/9060Dato
2015-07-09Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Zhang, Fengying; Xu, Jin; Zhang, Ziying; Meng, Haiying; Wang, Li; Lu, Jinmei; Wang, Wuyi; Kraft, ThomasSammendrag
Abstract To investigate temporal patterns, pollution
concentrations and the health effects of air pollutants in
Beijing we carried out time-series analyses on daily concentrations
of ambient air pollutants and daily numbers of
outpatient visits for otolaryngology over 2 years (2011–
2012) to identify possible health effects of air pollutants.
The results showed that PM10 was the major air pollutant
in Beijing and that air quality was slightly better in 2012
than in 2011. Seasonal differences were apparent for SO2
and NO2. Both the background and urban areas of Beijing
experienced particulate matter pollution in 2011. In
addition to local air pollution, Beijing was also affected
by pollutants transported from other regions, especially
during heavy air pollution episodes. PM10, NO2, and SO2
concentrations showed positive associations with numbers
of outpatient visits for otolaryngology during winter.
NO2 and SO2 also had adverse ear, nose, and throat health
effects outside of winter. The ear, nose, and throat health
risks caused by air pollutants were higher during the
winter than during the summer. NO2 had stronger influence
on increased the likelihood of outpatient visits than
SO2. The findings provide additional information about
air quality and health effects of air pollution in Beijing.
Beskrivelse
Accepted manuscript version. Published version available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10661-015-4711-3