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Ajouter le résultat dans votre panier Affiner la rechercheAir pollution and health : correlation or causality ? The case of the relationship between exposure to particles and cardiopulmonary mortality / Dab W in Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association [J Air Waste Manage Assoc], Vol. 51, N° 2 (02/2001)
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Titre : Air pollution and health : correlation or causality ? The case of the relationship between exposure to particles and cardiopulmonary mortality Type de document : Article scientifique Auteur(s) : Dab W ; Segala C ; Dor F ; Festy B ; Lameloise P ; Le Moullec Y ; Le Tertre A ; Medina S ; Quenel P ; Wallaert B ; Zmirou D Appartenance auteur(s) InVS DSE Année de publication : 2001 Article en page(s) : 220-35 Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association [J Air Waste Manage Assoc] > Vol. 51, N° 2 (02/2001) . - 220-35Mots-clés : Pollution atmosphérique ; Aérosol ; Accident circulation ; Synthèse connaissance ; Evaluation risque Mots-clés : APPAREIL RESPIRATOIRE [PATHOLOGIE] Résumé : Many epidemiologic studies have observed, in different contexts, a slight short-term relationship between particles in air and cardiopulmonary mortality, even when air quality standards were respected. The causality of this relationship is important to public health because of the number of people exposed. Our aim was to make a critical assessment of the arguments used in 15 reviews of published studies. We explain the importance of distinguishing validity from causality, and we systematically analyze the various criteria of judgment within the context of ecologic time studies. Our conclusion is that the observed relationship is valid and that most of the causality criteria are respected. It is hoped that the level of exposure of populations to these particles be reduced. In Europe, acting at the root of the problem, in particular on diesel emissions, will also enable the reduction of levels of other pollutants that can have an impact on health. In the United States, the situation is more complicated, as particles are mainly secondary. It is also essential to continue with research to become better acquainted with the determinants of personal global exposures and to better understand the toxic role of the various physicochemical factors of the particles. PMID Pubmed : Pubmed : 11256498 Corpus : Production scientifique InVS Permalink : http://opac.invs.sante.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=4171 [article]Analysis of health outcome time series data in epidemiological studies / Touloumi G in Environmetrics, Vol. 15 (2004)
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Titre : Analysis of health outcome time series data in epidemiological studies Type de document : Article scientifique Auteur(s) : Touloumi G ; Atkinson R ; Le Tertre A ; Samoli E ; Schwartz J ; Schindler C ; Vonk J ; Rossi G ; Saez M ; Rabczenko D ; Katsouyanni K Appartenance auteur(s) InVS DSE Année de publication : 2004 Article en page(s) : 101-17 Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Environmetrics > Vol. 15 (2004) . - 101-17Mots-clés : Statistique Mots-clés : SERIE TEMPORELLE Résumé : Several recent studies have reported significant health effects of air pollution even at low levels of air pollutants. These studies have been criticized for the statistical methods and for inconsistency in results between cities. An important development in air pollution epidemiology has come from multicenter studies. Within the APHEA-2 project we have developed a statistical methodology to evaluate short-term health effects of air pollution using data from 30 cities across Europe. For the analysis, a hierarchical modelling approach was adopted and implemented in two stages: (a) data from each city were analyzed separately to allow for local differences, using generalized additive Poisson regression models; (b) city-specific effects estimates were regressed on city-specific covariates to obtain an overall estimate and to explore heterogeneity across cities. In order to illustrate our methodology we present results for PM10 effects. It was found that a 10 microg/m3 increase in PM10 or NO2 concentrations is associated with a 0.67% (95% CI: 0.50 to 0.90) and 0.33% (0.20 to 0.40) increase in total mortality, respectively. After mutual adjustment, the PM10 effect was reduced by 40% and that of NO2 by 20%, but both pooled estimates remained significant. Long-term mean NO2 concentrations act as an effect modifier for PM10 effects, even after adjustment for NO2 confounding effects. In the second stage we explored two different models for combining the adjusted for NO2, PM10 effects across cities: bivariate, which accounts for within-city correlation of PM10 and NO2; and univariate, which ignores this correlation. Both models gave broadly the same results Corpus : Production scientifique InVS Permalink : http://opac.invs.sante.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=5662 [article]APHEIS. Health impact assessment of air pollution and communication strategy. Third year report / Medina S
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Titre : APHEIS. Health impact assessment of air pollution and communication strategy. Third year report Type de document : Rapport Auteur(s) : Medina S ; Boldo E ; Krzyzanowski M ; Niciu EM ; Mueke HG ; Atkinson R ; Zorilla B ; Cambra K ; Saklad M ; Le Tertre A ; Franke F ; Cassadou S ; Pascal L ; Maulpoix A ; and the contribution memberss of the APHEIS group Appartenance auteur(s) InVS DSE Editeur : Saint-Maurice : Institut de veille sanitaire Année de publication : 06/2005 Pagination : 200 p. Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Pollution atmosphérique ; Europe ; Evaluation ; Evaluation risque ; Indicateur ; Particule atmosphérique ; Fumée noire ; Long terme ; Court terme ; Cause décès ; Cancer ; Valeur référence ; Recommandation ; Entrée ; Hospitalisation ; Motif hospitalisation ; Milieu urbain Mots-clés : APPAREIL CIRCULATOIRE [PATHOLOGIE] APPAREIL RESPIRATOIRE [PATHOLOGIE] Résumé : This report sought to analyse the impact of air pollution on public health in 26 cities in 12 European countries as part of the ongoing work of the Apheis programme.
This Apheis-3 phase added further evidence to the finding in Apheis-2 that air pollution continues to pose a significant threat to public health in urban environments in Europe.
In particular, concerning the ability of Apheis cities across Europe to meet future standards designed to reduce the impact of air pollution on health, Apheis-3 determined that, while most of the 26 cities studied met the annual mean cut-off of 40 μg/m3 set as the limit value for PM10 to be reached by all member states of the European Union by 2005, 21 cities still exceeded the 2010 limit value of 20 μg/m3. Nonetheless, nine cities nearly met the latter value.
Concerning the impact of exposure to PM10 in the very short, short and long terms, in the 23 Apheis cities that measured PM10, totalling almost 36 million inhabitants, if all other things were equal and exposure to outdoor concentrations of raw PM10 were reduced to 20 μg/m3 in each city, 2 580 premature deaths, including 1 741 cardiovascular and 429 respiratory deaths, could be prevented annually if the impact is only estimated over a very short term of 2 days. The short-term impact, cumulated over 40 days, would be more than twice as great, totalling 5 240 premature deaths prevented annually, including 3 458 cardiovascular and 1 348 respiratory deaths. And the long-term impact2 over several years would be even higher, totalling 21 828 premature deaths prevented annually.
Apheis-3 also contributed the following significant findings: For both total and cause-specific mortality, the benefit of reducing converted PM2.5 levels to 15 μg/m3 is more than 30% greater than for a reduction to 20 μg/m3. Moreover, even at 15 μg/m3 a significant health impact can be expected.
In specific, the Apheis-3 HIA estimated that 11 375 “premature” deaths, including 8 053 cardiopulmonary deaths and 1 296 lung-cancer deaths, could be prevented annually if long-term exposure to the annual mean of converted PM2.5 levels were reduced to 20 μg/m3 in each city; and that 16 926 premature deaths, including 11 612 cardiopulmonary deaths and 1 901 lung-cancer deaths, could be prevented annually if long-term exposure to converted PM2.5 were reduced to 15 μg/m3.
In terms of life expectancy, if all other things were equal and the annual mean of PM2.5 converted from
PM10 did not exceed 15 μg/m3 the potential gain in life expectancy of a 30-year-old person would average between 2 and 13 months, due to the reduction in total mortality.
Black smoke is often considered a good proxy for traffic-related air pollution. In the 16 cities that measured BS, which total over 24 million inhabitants, if all other things were equal and BS levels were reduced to a 24-hour value of 20 μg/m3, 1 296 total “premature” deaths including 405 cardiovascular deaths and 109 respiratory deaths, could be prevented annually.
In the Apheis cities, particulate pollution contributed in a non-negligible manner to the total burden of mortality as follows:
- All other things being equal, when only considering very short-term exposure, the proportion of all-causes mortality attributable to a reduction to 20 μg/m3 in raw PM10 levels would be 0.9% of the total burden of mortality in the cities measuring PM10. This proportion would be greater, 1.8%, for a cumulative short-term exposure up to 40 days. Effects of long-term reduction in corrected PM10 levels would account for 7.2% of the burden of mortality.
- For black smoke, only very short-term exposure (raw levels) was considered. All other things being equal, the proportion of all-causes mortality attributable to a reduction to 20 μg/m3 in BS levels would be 0.7% of the total burden of mortality.
- For long-term exposure to PM2.5 converted from corrected PM10, all other things being equal the proportion of all-causes mortality attributable to a reduction to 20 μg/m3 in converted PM2.5 levels would be 4% of the total burden of mortality.
In order to provide a conservative overall picture of the impact of urban air pollution on public health in Europe, like its predecessor Apheis-2 the Apheis-3 phase used a limited number of air pollutants and health outcomes for its HIAs. Apheis-3 also established a good basis for comparing methods and findings between cities, and explored important HIA methodological issues.
Our findings add further support to WHO’s view that “it is reasonable to assume that a reduction of air pollution will lead to considerable health benefits.” And, at least for particulate pollution, our findings support WHO’s already strong recommendation for “further policy action to reduce levels of air pollutants including PM, NO2 and ozone”(WHO 2004). (R.A.)Corpus : Production scientifique InVS Permalink : http://opac.invs.sante.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=5521
- Health impact assessment of air pollution in 26 European cities and communication strategy. Latest findings of the APHEIS programme / Medina S in Pollution atmosphérique [Pollut Atmos], N° 186 (04/2005)
- Apheis. Air pollution and health: a European information system. Evaluation de l'impact sanitaire de la pollution atmosphérique en Europe. Rapport de la troisième phase, 2002-2003. Résultats pour les 9 villes du programme français / Larrieu S
Documents numériques
Apheis2005.pdfAdobe Acrobat PDFAPHEIS Health Impact Assessment of Air Pollution and Communication Strategy. Third year report, 2002-2003 / Medina S
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Titre : APHEIS Health Impact Assessment of Air Pollution and Communication Strategy. Third year report, 2002-2003 Type de document : Rapport Auteur(s) : Medina S ; Boldo E ; Krzyzanowski M ; Niciu EM ; Mueke HG ; Zorilla B ; Cambra K ; Saklad M ; Atkinson R ; Le Tertre A ; Franke F ; Cassadou S ; Pascal L ; Maulpoix A Appartenance auteur(s) InVS DSE Editeur : Saint-Maurice : Institut de veille sanitaire Année de publication : 07/2004 Pagination : 135 p. Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Pollution atmosphérique ; Europe ; Milieu urbain ; Ville ; Evaluation ; Particule atmosphérique ; Fumée noire ; Long terme ; Court terme ; Programme communautaire ; Réseau surveillance Mots-clés : IMPACT APPAREIL CIRCULATOIRE [PATHOLOGIE] APPAREIL CIRCULATOIRE [PATHOLOGIE] Corpus : Production scientifique InVS Permalink : http://opac.invs.sante.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=5083 Documents numériques
Apheis3NEW1.pdfAdobe Acrobat PDFApheis: Health Impact Assessment of Long-term Exposure to PM(2.5) in 23 European Cities / Boldo E in European journal of epidemiology [Eur J Epidemiol], Vol. 21, N° 6 (06/2006)
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Titre : Apheis: Health Impact Assessment of Long-term Exposure to PM(2.5) in 23 European Cities Type de document : Article scientifique Auteur(s) : Boldo E ; Medina S ; Le Tertre A ; Hurley F ; Mucke HG ; Ballester F ; Aguilera I ; Eilstein D Appartenance auteur(s) InVS DSE Année de publication : 2006 Article en page(s) : 449-58 Langues : Anglais (eng)
in European journal of epidemiology [Eur J Epidemiol] > Vol. 21, N° 6 (06/2006) . - 449-58Mots-clés : Pollution atmosphérique ; Exposition ; Evaluation risque ; Espérance vie ; Mortalité évitable ; Particule atmosphérique ; Morbidité ; Méthode épidémiologique ; Surveillance épidémiologique ; Europe Résumé : Apheis aims to provide European decision makers, environmental-health professionals and the general public with up-to-date and easy-to-use information on air pollution (AP) and public health (PH). In the Apheis-3 phase we quantified the PH impact of long-term exposure to PM2.5 (particulate matter PMID Pubmed : Pubmed : 16826453 Corpus : Production scientifique InVS Permalink : http://opac.invs.sante.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=4864 [article]Association entre pollution atmosphérique urbaine et hospitalisations pour pathologies cardiovasculaires et respiratoires : résultats du programme Psas-9. Congrès d'épidémiologie Adelf/Epiter, Dijon 30-31 août et 1er septembre 2006 / Larrieu S
PermalinkAssociations between air pollution and doctors' house visits for cardiorespiratory diseases in Bordeaux, France. Conference of the International Society for Environmental Epidemiology (ISEE), Mexico City, août 2007 / Larrieu S in Epidemiology, Vol. 18, N° 5S (09/2007)
PermalinkCanicule. Bilan des études réalisées par l'Institut de veille sanitaire et mise en place d'un système d'alerte / Laaidi K in La Presse thermale et climatique [Presse Therm Clim], Vol. 142 (2005)
PermalinkChikungunya disease outbreak, Reunion Island / Josseran L in Emerging infectious diseases [Emerg Infect Dis], Vol. 12, N° 12 (12/2006)
PermalinkConfounding and effect modification in the short-term effects of ambient particles on total mortality: results from 29 european cities within the APHEA2 Project / Katsouyanni K in Epidemiology, Vol. 12, N° 5 (09/2001)
PermalinkCritères microbiologiques de qualité des eaux de baignades : évaluation des risques en vue de la révision des normes européennes. Janvier 2001 / Pena L
PermalinkDefinition of temperature thresholds: the example of the French heat wave warning system / Pascal M in International journal of biometeorology [Int J Biometeorol], Vol. 57, N° 1 ([01/01/2013])
PermalinkDescription des fluctuations de la mortalité réunionnaise dans le contexte de l'épidémie de chikungunya en 2005-2006. Numéro thématique. Qu'avons-nous appris de l'épidémie de chikungunya dans l'Océan Indien en 2005-2006 ? / Josseran L in Bulletin Epidémiologique Hebdomadaire [Bull Epidemiol Hebd], N° 38-39-40 (21/10/2008)
PermalinkDifference in the relation between daily mortality and air pollution among elderly and all-ages populations in southwestern France / Filleul L in Environmental research [Environ Res], Vol. 94, N° 3 (03/2004)
PermalinkDix ans de surveillance des risques sanitaires liés à la pollution atmosphérique urbaine dans le cadre du Programme de surveillance air et santé (Psas). Numéro thématique. Surveillance en santé environnementale : mieux comprendre / Fabre P in Bulletin Epidémiologique Hebdomadaire [Bull Epidemiol Hebd], N° 27-28 (22/06/2009)
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