Air Pollution and Hospital Admissions for Respiratory Disease in Certain Areas of Korea

Recently studies reporting the incidence of diseases at air pollution levels below the recognized standard levels are increasing and the issue is becoming a matter of concern. We therefore examined the relationship between the level of air pollution in three areas of Korea and the incidence of respi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Occupational Health 2000-07, Vol.42 (4), p.185-191
Hauptverfasser: Cho, Belong, Choi, Jaewook, Yum, Yong‐Tae
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Choi, Jaewook
Yum, Yong‐Tae
description Recently studies reporting the incidence of diseases at air pollution levels below the recognized standard levels are increasing and the issue is becoming a matter of concern. We therefore examined the relationship between the level of air pollution in three areas of Korea and the incidence of respiratory diseases. Poisson regression models were used to account for day-of-the-week effects and nonparametric smoothing to make adjustments for season and weather in this time series analysis. The levels of air pollution across the three selected areas were characterized by the total suspended particle (TSP) concentration, which in Daejon was 61.28±29.22, in Ulsan 72.01±25.99, and in Suwon was 82.84±30.18. The total number of hospitalized cases due to respiratory diseases during the study period was 5,446. The relative risk of hospitalization due to respiratory diseases caused by air pollutants after accounting for seasonal and temperature effects were as follows:-CO (R.R.; 1.21, 95% C.I.; 1.02-1.44) in a residential area (Daejon), and NO_2 (R.R.; 1.47, 95% C.I.; 1.03-2.10) and CO (R.R; 2.51, 95% C.I.; 1.06-5.93) in a heavily industrialized area (Ulsan), and were statistically significant. When the TSP concentration was manipulated as a quintile dummy variable, the relative risk of admission increased by 2.48% (95% C.I.: 1.82%-3.15%) for every quintile increase. In conclusion, respiratory disease admissions are related to NO_2 , CO, and TSP concentrations below the environmental standard, but the significance of this relationship was area dependent.
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We therefore examined the relationship between the level of air pollution in three areas of Korea and the incidence of respiratory diseases. Poisson regression models were used to account for day-of-the-week effects and nonparametric smoothing to make adjustments for season and weather in this time series analysis. The levels of air pollution across the three selected areas were characterized by the total suspended particle (TSP) concentration, which in Daejon was 61.28±29.22, in Ulsan 72.01±25.99, and in Suwon was 82.84±30.18. The total number of hospitalized cases due to respiratory diseases during the study period was 5,446. The relative risk of hospitalization due to respiratory diseases caused by air pollutants after accounting for seasonal and temperature effects were as follows:-CO (R.R.; 1.21, 95% C.I.; 1.02-1.44) in a residential area (Daejon), and NO_2 (R.R.; 1.47, 95% C.I.; 1.03-2.10) and CO (R.R; 2.51, 95% C.I.; 1.06-5.93) in a heavily industrialized area (Ulsan), and were statistically significant. When the TSP concentration was manipulated as a quintile dummy variable, the relative risk of admission increased by 2.48% (95% C.I.: 1.82%-3.15%) for every quintile increase. 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The relative risk of hospitalization due to respiratory diseases caused by air pollutants after accounting for seasonal and temperature effects were as follows:-CO (R.R.; 1.21, 95% C.I.; 1.02-1.44) in a residential area (Daejon), and NO_2 (R.R.; 1.47, 95% C.I.; 1.03-2.10) and CO (R.R; 2.51, 95% C.I.; 1.06-5.93) in a heavily industrialized area (Ulsan), and were statistically significant. When the TSP concentration was manipulated as a quintile dummy variable, the relative risk of admission increased by 2.48% (95% C.I.: 1.82%-3.15%) for every quintile increase. 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source Oxford Journals Open Access Collection; J-STAGE Free; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Air pollution
Disease
Hospital admission
Hospitals
Industrial areas
Nitrogen dioxide
NO2
Occupational health
Patient admissions
Pollution levels
Residential areas
Respiratory disease
Respiratory diseases
Temperature effects
Time series analysis
TSP
title Air Pollution and Hospital Admissions for Respiratory Disease in Certain Areas of Korea
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