Abstract

Urban dwellers are simultaneously exposed to several environmental health risk factors. This study aimed to examine the relationship between long-term exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5, diameter < 2.5 µm) of residential-wood-burning and road-traffic origin, road-traffic noise, green space around participants’ homes, and hypertension. In 2015 and 2016, we conducted a survey of residents of the Helsinki Capital Region to determine their perceptions of environmental quality and safety, lifestyles, and health statuses. Recent antihypertensive medication was used as an indicator of current hypertensive illness. Individual-level exposure was estimated by linking residential coordinates with modelled outdoor levels of wood-smoke- and traffic-related PM2.5, road-traffic noise, and coverage of natural spaces. Relationships between exposure and hypertension were modelled using multi-exposure and single-exposure binary logistic regression while taking smooth functions into account. Twenty-eight percent of the participants were current users of antihypertensive medication. The odds ratios (95% confidence interval) for antihypertensive use were 1.12 (0.78–1.57); 0.97 (0.76–1.26); 0.98 (0.93–1.04) and 0.99 (0.94–1.04) for wood-smoke PM2.5, road-traffic PM2.5, road-traffic noise, and coverage of green space, respectively. We found no evidence of an effect of the investigated urban exposures on prevalent hypertension in the Helsinki Capital Region.

Highlights

  • We examined the relationships between fine particles from traffic and wood combustion, traffic noise, and green areas, and indicators of hypertension

  • One investigation [52] suggested that a reduction in the exposure of Guatemalan women to wood smoke reduced their risk of hypertension

  • This study found a 15% change in the prevalence of hypertension associated with PM2.5 in a single pollutant model and an 18% prevalence in a two-pollutant model adjusted for NO2

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Urban living is associated with some health risks which are related to situational factors including air pollution and noise exposure [1]. Key environmental attributes which dominate urban exposure have shown consistent associations with poor health outcomes [2]. The most important environmental factor is particulate air pollution [3]

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