Air Pollution and Emergency Hospital Admissions—Evidences from Lisbon Metropolitan Area, Portugal
Centre of Geographical Studies, Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning, Universidade de Lisboa, Rua Branca Edmée Marques, 1600-276 Lisbon, Portugal
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Appl. Sci. 2020, 10(22), 7997; https://doi.org/10.3390/app10227997
Received: 22 October 2020 / Revised: 6 November 2020 / Accepted: 9 November 2020 / Published: 11 November 2020
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Air Pollution: From Source Apportionment to Climate Change and Health Impact Assessment)
The relevance of air pollution in the public health agenda has recently been reinforced—it is known that exposure to it has negative effects in the health of individuals, especially in big cities and metropolitan areas. In this article we observed the evolution of air pollutants (CO, NO, NO2, O3, PM10) emissions and we confront them with health vulnerabilities related to respiratory and circulatory diseases (all circulatory diseases, cardiac diseases, cerebrovascular disease, ischemic heart disease, all respiratory diseases, chronic lower respiratory diseases, acute upper respiratory infections). The study is supported in two databases, one of air pollutants and the other of emergency hospital admissions, in the 2005–2015 period, applied to the Lisbon Metropolitan Area. The analysis was conducted through Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) regression, while also using semi-elasticity to quantify associations. Results showed positive associations between air pollutants and admissions, tendentially higher in respiratory diseases, with CO and O3 having the highest number of associations, and the senior age group being the most impacted. We concluded that O3 is a good predictor for the under-15 age group and PM10 for the over-64 age group; also, there seems to exist a distinction between the urban city core and its suburban areas in air pollution and its relation to emergency hospital admissions.
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Keywords:
air pollution; public health; hospital emergency admissions; respiratory diseases; circulatory diseases
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MDPI and ACS Style
Franco, P.; Gordo, C.; Marques da Costa, E.; Lopes, A. Air Pollution and Emergency Hospital Admissions—Evidences from Lisbon Metropolitan Area, Portugal. Appl. Sci. 2020, 10, 7997.
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