Repeated respiratory hospital encounters among children with asthma and residential proximity to traffic

Chang, J; Delfino, RJ; Gillen, D; Tjoa, T; Nickerson, B; Cooper, D

HERO ID

180393

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2008

Language

English

PMID

19151227

HERO ID 180393
In Press No
Year 2008
Title Repeated respiratory hospital encounters among children with asthma and residential proximity to traffic
Authors Chang, J; Delfino, RJ; Gillen, D; Tjoa, T; Nickerson, B; Cooper, D
Journal Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
Volume 66
Issue 2
Page Numbers 90-98
Abstract Objective: The prevalence of adverse respiratory outcomes among children has been frequently associated with measurements of traffic-related exposures, and other data suggest asthma severity is worsened with residence near heavy traffic. We examined the association between neighbourhood traffic burden and repeated acute respiratory illnesses that required emergency department visits and/or hospitalisation for children with a primary or secondary diagnosis of asthma (89% acute bronchitis or pneumonia). Methods: This is a hospital-based longitudinal study of a southern California urban catchment area around two adjacent children’s hospitals. Subjects’ home addresses were geocoded and linked to nearby traffic data. Recurrent event proportional hazard analysis was used to estimate the hazard of repeated hospital encounters. Results: We found living within 300 metres of arterialroads or freeways increased risk of repeated hospital encounters in 3297 children age 18 years or less. At highest risk were children in the top quintile of traffic density (HR=1.21; 95% CL 0.99 to 1.49) and those who had 750 metres or more of arterial road and freeway length within 300 metres of their residence (HR=1.18; 95% CL 0.99 to 1.41). Associations between repeated hospital encounters and residence near heavy traffic were stronger in females than males and in children without insurance or who required government sponsored insurance than children with private insurance. The gender disparity was most notable among infants (age 0) and children ages 6–18 years. Conclusions: Results suggest exposure to traffic-related air pollution increases asthma severity as indicated by hospital utilisation. The finding in infants suggests this is an especially vulnerable population, although the validity of asthma diagnosis at this age is unknown. Females and children who do not have private insurance may also be more vulnerable to air pollution from traffic.
Doi 10.1136/oem.2008.039412
Pmid 19151227
Wosid WOS:000262582200004
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Source: Web of Science 000262582200004
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Is Qa No
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