The Lancet Regional Health. Americas (Jun 2023)

Assessing socioeconomic bias of exposure to urban air pollution: an autopsy-based study in São Paulo, BrazilResearch in context

  • Julio da Motta Singer,
  • Carmen Diva Saldiva de André,
  • Paulo Afonso de André,
  • Francisco Marcelo Monteiro Rocha,
  • Dunia Waked,
  • Aline Macedo Vaz,
  • Gustavo Ferreira Gois,
  • Maria de Fátima Andrade,
  • Mariana Matera Veras,
  • Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva,
  • Ligia Vizeu Barrozo

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22
p. 100500

Abstract

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Summary: Background: The characterisation of individual exposure to air pollution in urban scenarios is a challenge in environmental epidemiological studies. We investigated if the city's pollution monitoring stations over or underestimate the exposure of individuals depending on their socioeconomic conditions and daily commuting times. Methods: The amount of black carbon accumulated in the lungs of 604 deceased who underwent autopsy in São Paulo was considered as a proxy for PM10. The concentrations of PM10 in the residence of the deceased were estimated by interpolating an ordinary kriging model. These two-exposure metrics allowed us to construct an environmental exposure misclassification index ranging from −1 to 1. The association between the index and daily commuting, socioeconomic context index (GeoSES), and street density as predictors was assessed by means of a multilevel linear regression model. Findings: With a decrease of 0.1 units in GeoSES, the index increases, on average, by 0.028 units and with an increase of 1 h in daily commuting, the index increases, on average, by 0.022 units indicating that individual exposure to air pollution is underestimated in the lower GeoSES and in people with many hours spent in daily commuting. Interpretation: Reduction of health consequences of air pollution demands not only alternative fuel and more efficient mobility strategies, but also should include profound rethink of cities. Funding: São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP-13/21728-2) and National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq-304126/2015-2, 401825/2020-5).

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