Authors
Klea Katsouyanni, Giotta Touloumi, Claudia Spix, Joel Schwartz, Franck Balducci, Silvya Medina, G Rossi, Bogdan Wojtyniak, Jordi Sunyer, Ljuba Bacharova, JP Schouten, A Ponka, HR Anderson
Publication date
1997/6/7
Journal
Bmj
Volume
314
Issue
7095
Pages
1658
Publisher
British Medical Journal Publishing Group
Description
Objectives: To carry out a prospective combined quantitative analysis of the associations between all cause mortality and ambient particulate matter and sulphur dioxide.
Design: Analysis of time series data on daily number of deaths from all causes and concentrations of sulphur dioxide and particulate matter (measured as black smoke or particles smaller than 10 μm in diameter (PM10)) and potential confounders.
Setting: 12 European cities in the APHEA project (Air Pollution and Health: a European Approach).
Main outcome measure: Relative risk of death.
Results: In western European cities it was found that an increase of 50 μg/m3 in sulphur dioxide or black smoke was associated with a 3% (95% confidence interval 2% to 4%) increase in daily mortality and the corresponding figure for PM10 was 2% (1% to 3%). In central eastern European cities the increase in mortality associated with a 50 μg/m3 change in …
Total citations
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