Assessment of human exposure to ambient particulate matter.
- 1 November 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association
- Vol. 49 (11) , 1280-1291
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10473289.1999.10463964
Abstract
Recent epidemiological studies have consistently shown that the acute mortality effects of high concentrations of ambient particulate matter (PM), documented in historic air pollution episodes, may also be occurring at the low to moderate concentrations of ambient PM found in modern urban areas. In London in December 1952, the unexpected deaths due to PM exposure could be identified and counted as integers by the coroners. In modern times, the PM-related deaths cannot be as readily identified, and they can only be inferred as fractional average daily increases in mortality rates using sophisticated statistical filtering and analyses of the air quality and mortality data. The causality of the relationship between exposure to ambient PM and acute mortality at these lower modern PM concentrations has been questioned because of a perception that there is little significant correlation in time between the ambient PM concentrations and measured personal exposure to PM from all sources (ambient PM plus indoor-generated PM). This article shows that the critical factor supporting the plausibility of a linear PM mortality relationship is the expected high correlation in time of people's exposure to PM of ambient origin with measured ambient PM concentrations, as used in the epidemiological time series studies. The presence of indoor and personal sources of PM masks this underlying relationship, leading to confusion in the scientific literature about the strong underlying temporal relationship between personal exposure to PM of ambient origin and ambient PM concentration. The authors show that the sources of PM of non-ambient origin operate independently of the ambient PM concentrations, so that the mortality effect of non-ambient PM, if any, must be independent of the effects of the ambient PM exposures.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Statistical Considerations in the Interpretation of Size-Resolved Particulate Mass DataJournal of the Air & Waste Management Association, 1998
- Fine Particles and Coarse Particles: Concentration Relationships Relevant to Epidemiologic StudiesJournal of the Air & Waste Management Association, 1997
- Ambient Particles and Health: Lines that DivideJournal of the Air & Waste Management Association, 1997
- Air Pollution and Mortality: The Implications of Uncertainties in Regression Modeling and Exposure MeasurementJournal of the Air & Waste Management Association, 1997
- The Relationship Between Total Suspended Particulate Matter (TSP) and British Smoke Measurements in London: Development of a Simple ModelJournal of the Air & Waste Management Association, 1995
- Spatial Variation in Acidic Sulfate and Ammonia Concentrations within Metropolitan PhiladelphiaJournal of the Air & Waste Management Association, 1995