Air pollutants and risk of death due to COVID-19 in Italy

The present work aims to study the role of air pollutants in relation to the number of deaths per each Italian province affected by COVID-19. To do that, specific mortality from COVID-19 has been standardized for each Italian province and per age group (10 groups) ranging from 0 to 9 years to >90...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental research 2021-01, Vol.192, p.110459-110459, Article 110459
Hauptverfasser: Dettori, Marco, Deiana, Giovanna, Balletto, Ginevra, Borruso, Giuseppe, Murgante, Beniamino, Arghittu, Antonella, Azara, Antonio, Castiglia, Paolo
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container_end_page 110459
container_issue
container_start_page 110459
container_title Environmental research
container_volume 192
creator Dettori, Marco
Deiana, Giovanna
Balletto, Ginevra
Borruso, Giuseppe
Murgante, Beniamino
Arghittu, Antonella
Azara, Antonio
Castiglia, Paolo
description The present work aims to study the role of air pollutants in relation to the number of deaths per each Italian province affected by COVID-19. To do that, specific mortality from COVID-19 has been standardized for each Italian province and per age group (10 groups) ranging from 0 to 9 years to >90 years, based on the 2019 national population figures. The link between air pollutants and COVID-19 mortality among Italian provinces was studied implementing a linear regression model, whereas the wide set of variables were examined by means of LISA (Local Indicators of Spatial Autocorrelation), relating the spatial component of COVID-19 related data with a mix of environmental variables as explanatory variables. As results, in some provinces, namely the Western Po Valley provinces, the SMR (Standardized Mortality Ratio) is much higher than expected, and the presence of PM10 was independently associated with the case status. Furthermore, the results for LISA on SMR and PM10 demonstrate clusters of high-high values in the wide Metropolitan area of Milan and the Po Valley area respectively, with a certain level of overlap of the two distributions in the area strictly considered Milan. In conclusion, this research appears to find elements to confirm the existence of a link between pollution and the risk of death due to the disease, in particular, considering land take and air pollution, this latter referred to particulate (PM10). For this reason, we can reiterate the need to act in favour of policies aimed at reducing pollutants in the atmosphere, by means of speeding up the already existing plans and policies, targeting all sources of atmospheric pollution: industries, home heating and traffic.
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Air pollutants
Air Pollutants - analysis
Air Pollutants - toxicity
Air Pollution - adverse effects
Air Pollution - analysis
COVID-19
Humans
Italy
Italy - epidemiology
Pandemics
Particulate matter
Particulate Matter - analysis
Particulate Matter - toxicity
PM10
SARS-CoV-2
title Air pollutants and risk of death due to COVID-19 in Italy
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