4.7 Article

The long-term trend of PM2.5-related mortality in China: The effects of source data selection

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 263, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.127894

Keywords

Satellite retrievals; Machine learning; PM2.5; Mortality assessment

Funding

  1. Chinese Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2019M660674]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71433007]
  3. MAIA science team at JPL, California Institute of Technology [1588347]

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Quantification of PM2.5 exposure and associated mortality is crucial for informing policy making. This study estimated approximately 25 million PM2.5-related deaths in China from 2001 to 2017 using state-of-the-art PM2.5 predictions and various population data. The assessment of mortality was found to be sensitive to exposure-response functions, missingness in PM2.5 prediction, and errors in population distribution.
Quantification of PM2.5 exposure and associated mortality is critical to inform policy making. Previous studies estimated varying PM2.5-related mortality in China due to the usage of different source data, but rarely justify the data selection. To quantify the sensitivity of mortality assessment to source data, we first constructed state-of-the-art PM2.5 predictions during 2000-2018 at a 1-km resolution with an ensemble machine learning model that filled missing data explicitly. We also calibrated and fused various gridded population data with a geostatistical method. Then we assessed the PM2.5-related mortality with various PM2.5 predictions, population distributions, exposure-response functions, and baseline mortalities. We found that in addition to the well documented uncertainties in the exposure-response functions, missingness in PM2.5 prediction, PM2.5 prediction error, and prediction error in population distribution resulted to a 40.5%, 25.2% and 15.9% lower mortality assessment compared to the mortality assessed with the best-performed source data, respectively. With the best-performed source data, we estimated a total of approximately 25 million PM2.5-related mortality during 2001-2017 in China. From 2001 to 2017, The PM2.5 variations, growth and aging of population, decrease in baseline mortality led to a 7.8% increase, a 42.0% increase and a 24.6% decrease in PM2.5-related mortality, separately. We showed that with the strict clean air policies implemented in 2013, the population-weighted PM2.5 concentration decreased remarkably at an annual rate of 4.5 mu g/m(3), leading to a decrease of 179 thousand PM2.5-related deaths nationwide during 2013-2017. The mortality decrease due to PM2.5 reduction was offset by the population growth and aging population. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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