Climate, traffic-related air pollutants, and asthma prevalence in middle-school children in taiwan
Resource
Environmental health perspectives 107 (12): 1001-1006
Journal
Environmental Health Perspectives
Pages
1001-1006
Date Issued
1999
Date
1999
Author(s)
Abstract
This study compared the prevalence of asthma with climate and air pollutant data to determine the relationship between asthma prevalence and these factors. We conducted a nationwide survey of respiratory illness and symptoms in middle-school students in Taiwan. Lifetime prevalences of physician-diagnosed asthma and of typical symptoms of asthma were compared to air monitoring station data for temperature, relative humidity, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, ozone, carbon monoxide, and particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter ≤ 10 μm (PM10). A total of 331,686 nonsmoking children attended schools located within 2 km of 55 stations. Asthma prevalence rates adjusted for age, history of atopic enema, and parental education were associated with nonsummer (June-August) temperature, winter (January-March) humidity, and traffic-related air pollution, especially carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxides, for both girls and boys. Nonsummer temperature, winter humidity, and traffic-related air pollution, especially carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxides, were positively associated with the prevalence of asthma in middle-school students in Taiwan.
Subjects
Air pollution; Asthma; Children; Climate; Environmental exposure
Other Subjects
carbon monoxide; nitrogen oxide; ozone; sulfur dioxide; adolescent; age; air monitoring; air pollution; article; asthma; climate; eczema; education; exhaust gas; female; human; humidity; major clinical study; male; parent; particulate matter; priority journal; respiratory tract disease; season; symptom; Taiwan; temperature
Type
journal article
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