Fine Particulate Air Pollution and Hospital Admission for Cardiovascular and Respiratory Diseases
Johns Hopkins University · Yale University
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
Results
There was a short-term increase in hospital admission rates associated with PM2.5 for all of the health outcomes except injuries. The largest association was for heart failure, which had a 1.28% (95% confidence interval, 0.78%-1.78%) increase in risk per 10-microg/m3 increase in same-day PM2.5. Cardiovascular risks tended to be higher in counties located in the Eastern region of the United States, which included the Northeast, the Southeast, the Midwest, and the South.
Conclusion
Short-term exposure to PM2.5 increases the risk for hospital admission for cardiovascular and respiratory diseases.
Citation impact
2,665
total citations
- FWCI
- 59.00
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 61
Citations per year
Authors
7Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Medicine
- Confidence interval
- Heart failure
- Environmental health
- Population
- Emergency medicine
- Internal medicine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Good health and well-being
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