Spatial Analysis of Air Pollution and Mortality in Los Angeles
New York University · University of Southern California · +7 more institutions
Abstract
The assessment of air pollution exposure using only community average concentrations may lead to measurement error that lowers estimates of the health burden attributable to poor air quality. To test this hypothesis, we modeled the association between air pollution and mortality using small-area exposure measures in Los Angeles, California.
Data on 22,905 subjects were extracted from the American Cancer Society cohort for the period 1982-2000 (5,856 deaths). Pollution exposures were interpolated from 23 fine particle (PM2.5) and 42 ozone (O3) fixed-site monitors. Proximity to expressways was tested as a measure of traffic pollution. We assessed associations in standard and spatial multilevel Cox regression models.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 36.24
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Authors
11Topics & keywords
- Relative risk
- Confidence interval
- Air pollution
- Confounding
- Medicine
- Environmental health
- Proportional hazards model
- Demography
- Good health and well-being