PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Respiratory health before and after the opening of a road traffic tunnel: a planned evaluation.

  • Christine T Cowie,
  • Nectarios Rose,
  • Wafaa Ezz,
  • Wei Xuan,
  • Adriana Cortes-Waterman,
  • Elena Belousova,
  • Brett G Toelle,
  • Vicky Sheppeard,
  • Guy B Marks

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048921
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 11
p. e48921

Abstract

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ObjectiveThe construction of a new road tunnel in Sydney, Australia, and concomitant reduction in traffic on a major road presented the opportunity to study the effects of this traffic intervention on respiratory health.MethodsWe made measurements in a cohort of residents in the year before the tunnel opened (2006) and in each of two years afterwards (2007-2008). Cohort members resided in one of four exposure zones, including a control zone. Each year, a respiratory questionnaire was administered (n = 2,978) and a panel sub-cohort (n = 380) performed spirometry once and recorded peak expiratory flow and symptoms twice daily for nine weeks.ResultsThere was no consistent evidence of improvement in respiratory health in residents living along the bypassed main road, despite a reduction in traffic from 90,000 to 45,000 vpd. Residents living near tunnel feeder roads reported more upper respiratory symptoms in the survey but not in the panel sub-cohort. Residents living around the tunnel ventilation stack reported more upper and lower respiratory symptoms and had lower spirometric volumes after the tunnel opened. Air pollutant levels measured near the stack did not increase over the study period.ConclusionThe finding of adverse health effects among residents living around the stack is unexpected and difficult to explain, but might be due to unmeasured pollutants or risk factors or an unrecognized pollutant source nearby. The lack of improvement in respiratory health among people living along the bypassed main road probably reflects a minimal change in exposure due to distance of residence from the road.