Examining the effects of air pollution composition on within region differences in PM 2.5 mortality risk estimates

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Abstract

Multi-city population-based epidemiological studies have observed significant heterogeneity in both the magnitude and direction of city-specific risk estimates, but tended to focus on regional differences in PM 2.5 mortality risk estimates. Interpreting differences in risk estimates is complicated by city-to-city heterogeneity observed within regions due to city-to-city variations in the PM 2.5 composition and the concentration of gaseous pollutants. We evaluate whether variations in PM 2.5 composition and gaseous pollutant concentrations have a role in explaining the heterogeneity in PM 2.5 mortality risk estimates observed in 27 US cities from 1997 to 2002. Within each region, we select the two cities with the largest and smallest mortality risk estimate. We compare for each region the within- and between-city concentrations and correlations of PM 2.5 constituents and gaseous pollutants. We also attempt to identify source factors through principal component analysis (PCA) for each city. The results of this analysis indicate that identifying a PM constituent(s) that explains the differences in the PM 2.5 mortality risk estimates is not straightforward. The difference in risk estimates between cities in the same region may be attributed to a group of pollutants, possibly those related to local sources such as traffic. © 2013 Nature America, Inc.

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Baxter, L. K., Duvall, R. M., & Sacks, J. (2013). Examining the effects of air pollution composition on within region differences in PM 2.5 mortality risk estimates. Journal of Exposure Science and Environmental Epidemiology, 23(5), 457–465. https://doi.org/10.1038/jes.2012.114

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