Decreases
in ambient air pollution levels over the past 20 years in Southern California
were associated with significant reductions in bronchitic symptoms in children
with and without asthma, according to a study appearing in the April 12 issue
of JAMA.
Childhood
bronchitic symptoms are significant public and clinical health problems that
produce a substantial burden of disease. Ambient air pollutants are important
determinants of bronchitis occurrence. Since 1992, significant improvements in
air quality have been observed across Southern California due to a broad range
of air pollution reduction policies and strategies. Kiros Berhane, Ph.D., of
the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, and colleagues examined
whether improvements in ambient air quality in Southern California were
associated with reductions in bronchitic symptoms in children. The study
involved children (age range, 5-18 years) from 3 groups, and was conducted
during the 1993-2001, 1996-2004, and 2003-2012 years in 8 Southern California
communities.
A
model was used to estimate the association of changes in pollution
levels with bronchitic symptoms. The primary measured outcome among
children was annual age-specific prevalence of bronchitic symptoms during the
previous 12 months based on the parent's or child's report of a daily cough for
3 months in a row, congestion or phlegm other than when accompanied by a cold,
or bronchitis.
The
3 cohorts included a total of 4,602 children (average age at baseline, 8 years;
49 percent girls; 45 percent Hispanic white) who had data from 2 or more annual
questionnaires. Among these children, 19 percent had asthma at age 10 years.
The authors found that decreases in ambient concentrations of nitrogen dioxide,
ozone, and particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter less than 10 µm
(PM10) and less than 2.5 µm (PM2.5) were associated with significant decreases
in bronchitic symptoms in children with and without asthma. The reductions were
proportionally larger in children with asthma and remained similar when
examined at 10, 13, and 15 years of age during the follow-up period. Among
patients with asthma, the reductions in bronchitic symptoms tended to be larger
in boys and among children from households with dogs.
"While
the study design does not establish causality, the findings support potential
benefit of air pollution reduction on asthma
control," the authors write.
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2016-04-decrease-air-pollution-respiratory-symptoms.html
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