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Title: Spatial modeling of PM10 and NO2 in the continental United States, 1985-2000.

Authors: Hart, Jaime E; Yanosky, Jeff D; Puett, Robin C; Ryan, Louise; Dockery, Douglas W; Smith, Thomas J; Garshick, Eric; Laden, Francine

Published In Environ Health Perspect, (2009 Nov)

Abstract: Epidemiologic studies of air pollution have demonstrated a link between long-term air pollution exposures and mortality. However, many have been limited to city-specific average pollution measures or spatial or land-use regression exposure models in small geographic areas.Our objective was to develop nationwide models of annual exposure to particulate matter < 10 microm in diameter (PM(10)) and nitrogen dioxide during 1985-2000.We used generalized additive models (GAMs) to predict annual levels of the pollutants using smooth spatial surfaces of available monitoring data and geographic information system-derived covariates. Model performance was determined using a cross-validation (CV) procedure with 10% of the data. We also compared the results of these models with a commonly used spatial interpolation, inverse distance weighting.For PM(10), distance to road, elevation, proportion of low-intensity residential, high-intensity residential, and industrial, commercial, or transportation land use within 1 km were all statistically significant predictors of measured PM(10) (model R(2) = 0.49, CV R(2) = 0.55). Distance to road, population density, elevation, land use, and distance to and emissions of the nearest nitrogen oxides-emitting power plant were all statistically significant predictors of measured NO(2) (model R(2) = 0.88, CV R(2) = 0.90). The GAMs performed better overall than the inverse distance models, with higher CV R(2) and higher precision.These models provide reasonably accurate and unbiased estimates of annual exposures for PM(10) and NO(2). This approach provides the spatial and temporal variability necessary to describe exposure in studies assessing the health effects of chronic air pollution.

PubMed ID: 20049118 Exiting the NIEHS site

MeSH Terms: No MeSH terms associated with this publication

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