학술논문

Costs of coronary heart disease and mortality associated with near-roadway air pollution
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Epidemiology
Environmental Sciences
Health Sciences
Cardiovascular
Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions
Heart Disease
Good Health and Well Being
Air Pollutants
Air Pollution
California
Coronary Disease
Environmental Exposure
Humans
Particulate Matter
Vehicle Emissions
Vehicle emissions
Cardiovascular disease
Burden of disease
Micro-costing analysis
Cost of illness
Language
Abstract
BackgroundEmerging evidence indicates that the near-roadway air pollution (NRAP) mixture contributes to CHD, yet few studies have evaluated the associated costs.ObjectiveWe integrated an assessment of NRAP-attributable CHD in Southern California with new methods to value the associated mortality and hospitalizations.MethodsBased on population-weighted residential exposure to NRAP (traffic density, proximity to a major roadway and elemental carbon), we estimated the inflation-adjusted value of NRAP-attributable mortality and costs of hospitalizations that occurred in 2008. We also estimated anticipated costs in 2035 based on projected changes in population and in NRAP exposure associated with California's plans to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. For comparison, we estimated the value of CHD mortality attributable to PM less than 2.5μm in diameter (PM2.5) in both 2008 and 2035.ResultsThe value of CHD mortality attributable to NRAP in 2008 was between $3.8 and $11.5 billion, 23% (major roadway proximity) to 68% (traffic density) of the $16.8 billion attributable to regulated regional PM2.5. NRAP-attributable costs were projected to increase to $10.6 to $22 billion in 2035, depending on the NRAP metric. Cost of NRAP-attributable hospitalizations for CHD in 2008 was $48.6 million and was projected to increase to $51.4 million in 2035.ConclusionsWe developed an economic framework that can be used to estimate the benefits of regulations to improve air quality. CHD attributable to NRAP has a large economic impact that is expected to increase by 2035, largely due to an aging population. PM2.5-attributable costs may underestimate total value of air pollution-attributable CHD.