Environment International (Apr 2024)

Global health impacts of ambient fine particulate pollution associated with climate variability

  • S.H.L. Yim,
  • Y. Li,
  • T. Huang,
  • J.T. Lim,
  • H.F. Lee,
  • S.H. Chotirmall,
  • G.H. Dong,
  • J. Abisheganaden,
  • J.A. Wedzicha,
  • S.C. Schuster,
  • B.P. Horton,
  • J.J.Y. Sung

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 186
p. 108587

Abstract

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Air pollution is a key global environmental problem raising human health concern. It is essential to comprehensively assess the long-term characteristics of air pollution and the resultant health impacts. We first assessed the global trends of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) during 1980–2020 using a monthly global PM2.5 reanalysis dataset, and evaluated their association with three types of climate variability including El Niño-Southern Oscillation, Indian Ocean Dipole and North Atlantic Oscillation. We then estimated PM2.5-attributable premature deaths using integrated exposure–response functions. Results show a significant increasing trend of ambient PM2.5 during 1980–2020 due to increases in anthropogenic emissions. Ambient PM2.5 caused a total of ∼ 135 million premature deaths globally during the four decades. Occurrence of air pollution episodes was strongly associated with climate variability, which were associated with up to 14 % increase in annual global PM2.5-attributable premature deaths.

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