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Characterization of the concentration-response curve for ambient ozone and acute respiratory morbidity in 5 US cities.


ABSTRACT: Although short-term exposure to ambient ozone (O3) can cause poor respiratory health outcomes, the shape of the concentration-response (C-R) between O3 and respiratory morbidity has not been widely investigated. We estimated the effect of daily O3 on emergency department (ED) visits for selected respiratory outcomes in 5 US cities under various model assumptions and assessed model fit. Population-weighted average 8-h maximum O3 concentrations were estimated in each city. Individual-level data on ED visits were obtained from hospitals or hospital associations. Poisson log-linear models were used to estimate city-specific associations between the daily number of respiratory ED visits and 3-day moving average O3 levels controlling for long-term trends and meteorology. Linear, linear-threshold, quadratic, cubic, categorical, and cubic spline O3 C-R models were considered. Using linear C-R models, O3 was significantly and positively associated with respiratory ED visits in each city with rate ratios of 1.02-1.07 per 25?ppb. Models suggested that O3-ED C-R shapes were linear until O3 concentrations of roughly 60?ppb at which point risk continued to increase linearly in some cities for certain outcomes while risk flattened in others. Assessing C-R shape is necessary to identify the most appropriate form of the exposure for each given study setting.

SUBMITTER: Barry V 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6301150 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Characterization of the concentration-response curve for ambient ozone and acute respiratory morbidity in 5 US cities.

Barry Vaughn V   Klein Mitchel M   Winquist Andrea A   Chang Howard H HH   Mulholland James A JA   Talbott Evelyn O EO   Rager Judith R JR   Tolbert Paige E PE   Sarnat Stefanie Ebelt SE  

Journal of exposure science & environmental epidemiology 20180619 2


Although short-term exposure to ambient ozone (O<sub>3</sub>) can cause poor respiratory health outcomes, the shape of the concentration-response (C-R) between O<sub>3</sub> and respiratory morbidity has not been widely investigated. We estimated the effect of daily O<sub>3</sub> on emergency department (ED) visits for selected respiratory outcomes in 5 US cities under various model assumptions and assessed model fit. Population-weighted average 8-h maximum O<sub>3</sub> concentrations were esti  ...[more]

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