Abstract

BackgroundThe District of Columbia (DC) Department of Health, under a grant from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, established an Environmental Public Health Tracking Program. As part of this program, the goals of this contextual pilot study are to quantify short-term associations between daily pediatric emergency department (ED) visits and admissions for asthma exacerbations with ozone and particulate concentrations, and broader associations with socio-economic status and age group.MethodsData included daily counts of de-identified asthma-related pediatric ED visits for DC residents and daily ozone and particulate concentrations during 2001–2004. Daily temperature, mold, and pollen measurements were also obtained. After a cubic spline was applied to control for long-term seasonal trends in the ED data, a Poisson regression analysis was applied to the time series of daily counts for selected age groups.ResultsAssociations between pediatric asthma ED visits and outdoor ozone concentrations were significant and strongest for the 5–12 year-old age group, for which a 0.01-ppm increase in ozone concentration indicated a mean 3.2% increase in daily ED visits and a mean 8.3% increase in daily ED admissions. However, the 1–4 yr old age group had the highest rate of asthma-related ED visits. For 1–17 yr olds, the rates of both asthma-related ED visits and admissions increased logarithmically with the percentage of children living below the poverty threshold, slowing when this percentage exceeded 30%.ConclusionSignificant associations were found between ozone concentrations and asthma-related ED visits, especially for 5–12 year olds. The result that the most significant ozone associations were not seen in the age group (1–4 yrs) with the highest rate of asthma-related ED visits may be related to the clinical difficulty in accurately diagnosing asthma among this age group. We observed real increases in relative risk of asthma ED visits for children living in higher poverty zip codes versus other zip codes, as well as similar logarithmic relationships for visits and admissions, which implies ED over-utilization may not be a factor. These results could suggest designs for future epidemiological studies that include more information on individual exposures and other risk factors.

Highlights

  • The District of Columbia (DC) Department of Health, under a grant from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, established an Environmental Public Health Tracking Program

  • For hospital admissions from emergency department (ED) visits, the analysis was significant for the 1–17 yrs age group (Table 2), with a 0.01-ppm increase in ozone being associated with a 4.5% increase in asthma-related ED admissions

  • The 5–12 yrs age group showed even greater ozone impacts (Table 2), with a 0.01ppm increase in ozone concentration being associated with an 8.3% increase in asthma-related ED admissions

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Summary

Introduction

The District of Columbia (DC) Department of Health, under a grant from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, established an Environmental Public Health Tracking Program As part of this program, the goals of this contextual pilot study are to quantify short-term associations between daily pediatric emergency department (ED) visits and admissions for asthma exacerbations with ozone and particulate concentrations, and broader associations with socioeconomic status and age group. Elevated concentrations of ground-level ozone and particulates have been shown to be associated with increased incidence of asthma exacerbations [1,2,3]. Aeroallergens, such as pollen and mold, may trigger allergy-induced asthma symptoms. At the other temperature extreme, studies have suggested that very cold, dry air acts as an airway irritant, yet primarily results in exacerbations of exercise-induced asthma [5,6,7], which is not a part of this study

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