4.7 Article

Short-Term Exposure to Ambient Air Pollution and Increased Emergency Room Visits for Skin Diseases in Beijing, China

Journal

TOXICS
Volume 9, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxics9050108

Keywords

air pollution; particulate matter; emergency room visits; skin diseases; dermatitis; eczema; urticaria

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [22076006, 82073506]
  2. Ministry of Ecology and Environment: the research of national-level ecological and environmental planning [14430019]

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This study found associations between ambient air pollution levels of PM2.5 and NO2 and an increase in emergency room visits for skin diseases in Beijing, China, particularly in cases of dermatitis/eczema and urticaria. These associations remained significant even with improvements in air quality control measures in China.
Skin diseases have become a global concern. This study aims to evaluate the associations between ambient air pollution and emergency room visits for skin diseases under the background of improving air quality in China. Based on 45,094 cases from a general hospital and fixed-site monitoring environmental data from 2014-2019 in Beijing, China, this study used generalized additive models with quasi-Poisson regression to estimate the exposure-health associations at lag 0-1 to lag 0-7. PM2.5 and NO2 exposure were associated with increased emergency room visits for total skin diseases (ICD10: L00-L99). Positive associations of PM2.5, PM10, O-3 and NO2 with dermatitis/eczema (ICD-10: L20-30), as well as SO2 and NO2 with urticaria (ICD-10: L50) visits were also found. For instance, a 10 mu g/m(3) increase in PM2.5 was associated with increases of 0.7% (95%CI: 0.2%, 1.2%) in total skin diseases visits at lag 0-5 and 1.1% (95%CI: 0.6%, 1.7%) in dermatitis/eczema visits at lag 0-1, respectively. For PM2.5, PM10 and CO, stronger annual associations were typically observed in the high-pollution (2014) and low-pollution (2018/2019) years. For instance, a 10 mu g/m(3) increase in PM2.5 at lag 0-5 was associated with increases of 1.8% (95%CI: 1.0%, 2.6%) and 2.3% (95%CI: 0.4%, 4.3%) in total skin disease visits in 2014 and 2018, respectively. Our study emphasizes the necessity of controlling the potential health hazard of air pollutants on skin, although significant achievements in air quality control have been made in China.

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