4.7 Review

Air quality monitoring and measurement in an urban airshed: Contextualizing datasets from the Detroit Michigan area from 1952 to 2020

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 809, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.152120

Keywords

Criteria air pollutants; Scoping review; Nitrogen dioxide; Particulate matter; Sulfur dioxide; Community science

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1735038]
  2. Wayne State University (WSU) Detroit AirNet group, Ecology Center, Detroit Air Quality Sensor Learning Collaborative
  3. WSU Society of Environmental Engineering and Sustainability
  4. Division Of Graduate Education
  5. Direct For Education and Human Resources [1735038] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study conducts a scoping review of air quality data in the Detroit area, establishing a foundation of historical air quality data and evaluation criteria that can be applied to other urban centers. The study finds that particulate matter, nitrous oxides, and sulfur dioxide are the most commonly studied air pollutants, with asthma being the most frequently associated health outcome in relation to air pollution datasets.
With urban air quality being a pressing public health concern, community members are becoming increasingly engaged in determining the links between air quality and human health. Although new measurement tools such as low-cost sensors make local data more accessible, a better understanding of gaps in regional datasets is needed to develop effective metropolitan-scale solutions. Using scoping review methodology, we compiled 214 published journal articles and grey literature reports of air quality data from the Detroit, Michigan area from 1952 through 2020. This critical scoping review focuses on air quality datasets, but related topics such as health studies and communitybased participatory science studies were examined from the included articles. Most of these publications were peerreviewed journal articles published after 2001. Particulate matter, nitrous oxides, and sulfur dioxide were the most commonly studied air pollutants, and asthma was the most frequently associated health outcome paired with air pollution datasets. Few publications reported methods for community-based participatory science. This critical scoping review establishes a foundation of historical air quality data for the Detroit metropolitan area and a set of evaluation criteria that can be replicated in other urban centers. This foundation enables future detailed analysis of air quality datasets and showcases strategies for implementing effective community science programs and monitoring efforts.

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