Race, Gender, and Social Status as Modifiers of the Effects of PM10 on Mortality : Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine

Secondary Logo

Journal Logo

Original Articles

Race, Gender, and Social Status as Modifiers of the Effects of PM10 on Mortality

Zanobetti, Antonella PhD; Schwartz, Joel PhD

Author Information
Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 42(5):p 469-474, May 2000.

Abstract

Interest has recently been focused on which populations are most at risk of premature mortality induced by air pollution. This coincides with greater concern about environmental justice. We analyzed total mortality in the four largest US cities with daily measurements of particulate matter less than 10 μm (PM10) and combined the results to determine whether race, sex, and education are potential modifiers of the effects of PM10 on mortality. We computed daily counts of deaths stratified by sex, race, and education in each city and investigated their associations with PM10 in a Poisson regression model. We combined the results by using inverse variance weighted averages. We found evidence of effect modification by sex, with the slope in female deaths one third larger than in male deaths, whereas for social factors and race we found only weak evidence of effect modification. In general, the effect modification appeared modest compared with other reports of substantial effect modification by medical conditions.

© 2000 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

You can read the full text of this article if you:

Access through Ovid