Abstract

Elevated air pollution, along with rapid urbanization, have imposed higher health risks and a higher disease burden on urban residents. To accurately assess the increasing exposure risk and the spatial association between PM2.5 and lung cancer incidence, this study integrated PM2.5 data from the National Air Quality Monitoring Platform and location-based service (LBS) data to introduce an improved PM2.5 exposure model for high-precision spatial assessment of Guangzhou, China. In this context, the spatial autocorrelation method was used to evaluate the spatial correlation between lung cancer incidence and PM2.5. The results showed that people in densely populated areas suffered from higher exposure risk, and the spatial distribution of population exposure risk was highly consistent with the dynamic distribution of the population. In addition, areas with PM2.5 roughly overlapped with areas with high lung cancer incidence, and the lung cancer incidence in different locations was not randomly distributed, confirming that lung cancer incidence was significantly associated with PM2.5 exposure. Therefore, dynamic population distribution has a great impact on the accurate assessment of environmental exposure and health burden, and it is necessary to use LBS data to improve the exposure assessment model. More mitigation controls are needed in highly populated and highly polluted areas.

Highlights

  • The prediction value of the ordinary kriging spatial interpolation is similar to that obtained by the land-use regression (LUR) model, but it performs better in predicting the annual and seasonal averages

  • Ordinary kriging interpolation was used for the daily hourly PM2.5 concentration data in Guangzhou to obtain the spatial distribution

  • The PM2.5 concentration in the study area was high in the west and low in the north and south, which is consistent with the topography of Guangzhou, which is high in the northeast and gentle in the middle

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Summary

Introduction

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