Transcript
Page 1: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

The Global Burden of Anthropogenic Ozone and Particulate Matter Air Pollution on

Premature Human Mortality

Presentation to CMASOctober 7, 2008

Susan Casper, J. Jason WestUNC - Chapel Hill

Larry HorowitzNOAA GFDL, Princeton, NJ

Daniel TongScience and Technology Corporation, US EPA, Research Triangle Park, NC

Page 2: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

Previous Study

800,000 annual mortalities due to urban PM

Cohen, et al. (2004) Urban Air Pollution, In Comparative quantification of health risks. Geneva, WHO.

Page 3: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

Objectives

• Estimate global burden of human mortality due to anthropogenic ozone and PM

• Use model approach to improve on previous methods– Rural areas– Isolation of anthropogenic pollution

Page 4: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

Approach – Health Impact Functions

Δ Mortality = [1 - exp(-β * ΔX) ] * Y0 * PopΔ Mortality = [1 - exp(-β * ΔX) ] * Y0 * Pop

Baseline mortality rate

Exposed population

Concentration-response factor Change in

exposure concentration

Page 5: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

Δ Mortality = [1 - exp(-β * ΔX) ] * Y0 * PopΔ Mortality = [1 - exp(-β * ΔX) ] * Y0 * Pop

Concentration-Response Factors (CRF)

Source: Bell et al., 2004Source: Pope et al., 2002

Concentration (x)

ln R

R

ln RR

ΔX

For ozone, stronger effects captured by daily time-series studies:

For PM, stronger effects captured by cohort studies:

xt

Page 6: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

Δ Mortality = [1 - exp(-β * ΔX) ] * Y0 * PopΔ Mortality = [1 - exp(-β * ΔX) ] * Y0 * Pop

Δ annual average daily 8-hr max. O3 (2000-preindustrial)

Δ annual average PM (2000-preindustrial)

Concentrations

MOZART-2 surface data from Horowitz (2006)

Page 7: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

Δ Mortality = [1 - exp(-β * ΔX) ] * Y0 * PopΔ Mortality = [1 - exp(-β * ΔX) ] * Y0 * Pop

All-cause

Lung Cancer

Cardiopulmonary

Baseline Mortality Rates

WHO, 2004

Page 8: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

Annual Ozone Mortalities

Best estimate: 282,000 to 362,000 cardiopulmonary mortalities with uncertainty ranging from 135,000 – 551,000.

Page 9: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

Annual Ozone Mortalities

Non-accidental

Cardiopulmonary

Mortalities per 1000 km2 Mortalities per 1E6 people

Page 10: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

Ozone mortality estimates are sensitive to HIF parameters

Meta-analyses: Bell et al. 2005; Ito et al. 2005; Levy et al. 2005

Page 11: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

Annual PM Mortalities

Best estimate: 1.3 to 2.4 million cardiopulmonary and lung cancer mortalities with uncertainty ranging from 465,000 –3.8 million.

Page 12: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

Annual PM Mortalities

All-cause

Cardiopulmonary

Lung Cancer

Mortalities per 1000 km2 Mortalities per 1E6 people

Page 13: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

PM mortality estimates are sensitive to HIF parameters

Page 14: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

Comparison to Previous Study• Recall… Cohen et al. (2004) found 800,000

mortalities due to urban PM

891,000 (299,000-1.4 million)

Including rural population and capturing urban peaks would suggest even larger numbers of mortalities

Page 15: Presentation to CMAS October 7, 2008 Susan Casper, J. Jason West UNC - Chapel Hill Larry Horowitz

SummaryOzone PM

Cardiopulmonary Mortalities 282,000 to 362,000 (135,000-551,000)

1.2 - 2.2 million (429,000-3.5 million)

Lung Cancer Mortalities n/a111,000 - 192,000 (36,000-282,000)

Best Estimate 282,000 to 362,000 (135,000-551,000)

1.3 - 2.4 million(465,000-3.8 million)

% of All Global Mortalities 0.5 - 0.6(0.2 – 0.9)

2.2 - 4.0(0.7 – 6.3)

• Results highly dependent on assumptions– CRF– Threshold

• High density of mortalities in densely populated areas, but some in less populated areas


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