4.4 Article

Inequality in the Distribution of Air Pollution Attributable Mortality Within Canadian Cities

Journal

GEOHEALTH
Volume 7, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2023GH000816

Keywords

air pollution; environmental injustice; environmental racism

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Recent studies have found inequality in the distribution of air pollution attributable health impacts, but no research has been done on this in Canadian cities. This study evaluated the extent and sources of inequality in air pollution attributable mortality in seven of Canada's largest cities. The findings showed that areas with a higher prevalence of low income and Indigenous identity had significantly higher air pollution attributable mortality. Reducing inequality in air pollution mortality requires addressing disparities in baseline mortality and air pollution exposure.
Recent studies have identified inequality in the distribution of air pollution attributable health impacts, but to our knowledge this has not been examined in Canadian cities. We evaluated the extent and sources of inequality in air pollution attributable mortality at the census tract (CT) level in seven of Canada's largest cities. We first regressed fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) attributable mortality against the neighborhood (CT) level prevalence of age 65 and older, low income, low educational attainment, and identification as an Indigenous (First Nations, Metis, Inuit) or Black person, accounting for spatial autocorrelation. We next examined the distribution of baseline mortality rates, PM2.5 and NO2 concentrations, and attributable mortality by neighborhood (CT) level prevalence of these characteristics, calculating the concentration index, Atkinson index, and Gini coefficient. Finally, we conducted a counterfactual analysis of the impact of reducing baseline mortality rates and air pollution concentrations on inequality in air pollution attributable mortality. Regression results indicated that CTs with a higher prevalence of low income and Indigenous identity had significantly higher air pollution attributable mortality. Concentration index, Atkinson index, and Gini coefficient values revealed different degrees of inequality among the cities. Counterfactual analysis indicated that inequality in air pollution attributable mortality tended to be driven more by baseline mortality inequalities than exposure inequalities. Reducing inequality in air pollution attributable mortality requires reducing disparities in both baseline mortality and air pollution exposure.

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