Short-Term Ozone Pollution
Raises Mortality Risk
When ozone goes up in cities, even for
short periods at levels below current regulatory standards, so
does the death rate, according to an article in the Journal of
the American Medical Association.
The study, looking at 95 large
urban communities over a 14-year period, is one of the largest
to investigate the relationship between ozone and mortality, Dr.
Michelle L. Bell stated.
Bell, at Yale University in New
Haven, Connecticut, and colleagues at Johns Hopkins University
in Baltimore, obtained data from the National Center for Health
Statistics from 1987 to 2000, and air-pollution data on ozone
from the US Environmental Protection Agency.
A 10 part-per-billion (ppb) increase
in daily ozone levels over a previous week was associated with
an average increase of 0.52 percent in daily non-injury-related
deaths, the team reports.
That figure translates to an additional
319 premature deaths annually for New York City, the region with
the highest ozone-related mortality, for each 10 ppb increase
in ozone, and an increase of 3767 deaths annually for all 95 urban
areas.
There appear to be regional variations,
Bell pointed out. "We need to look at this in more depth to see
if ozone has stronger effects in some parts of the country than
in others."
It may be, she said, that certain
factors specific to different cities, such as income levels, racial
distributions, or even the use of air conditioning could affect
the mortality risk associated with ozone pollution.
The investigators noted that death
rates increased at ozone pollution levels below current regulatory
cut-offs. Bell pointed out that the EPA, a co-sponsor of this
study, is mandated by the Clean Air Act to periodically review
air pollution standards. The results of her team's study and others
may induce the agency to strengthen its ozone standards.
SOURCE: Journal of the American
Medical Association, November 17, 2004.
Reference
Source 89
Nov 16, 2004
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