posted on 2019-06-14, 12:44authored byM Blangiardo, M Pirani, L Kanapka, A Hansell, G Fuller
When assessing the short-term effect of air pollution on health outcomes, it is common practice to consider one pollutant at a time, due to their high correlation. Multi pollutant methods have been recently proposed, mainly consisting of collapsing the different pollutants into air quality indexes or clustering the pollutants and then evaluating the effect of each cluster on the health outcome. A major drawback of such approaches is that it is not possible to evaluate the health impact of each pollutant. In this paper we propose the use of the Bayesian hierarchical framework to deal with multi pollutant concentrations in a two-component model: a pollutant model is specified to estimate the 'true' concentration values for each pollutant and then such concentration is linked to the health outcomes in a time-series perspective. Through a simulation study we evaluate the model performance and we apply the modelling framework to investigate the effect of six pollutants on cardiovascular mortality in Greater London in 2011-2012.
Funding
MB and GF acknowledge partial support through the Natural Environment Research Council/MRC funded project: NE/I00789X/1 “Traffic Pollution and health in London”. MP and MB acknowledge partial support through the Medical Research Council funded project: MR/M025195/1 “A general framework to adjust for missing confounders in observational studies”.
History
Citation
PLoS One, 2019, 14(3): e0212565
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences