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Increasing racial and ethnic disparities in ambient air pollution-attributable morbidity and mortality in the United States

Published March 6, 2024, in Environmental Health Perspectives (opens in a new window)

Abstract

Background

Ambient nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and fine particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter ≤2.5μ⁢m (PM2.5) threaten public health in the US, and systemic racism has led to modern-day disparities in the distribution and associated health impacts of these pollutants.

Objectives

Many studies on environmental injustices related to ambient air pollution focus only on disparities in pollutant concentrations or provide only an assessment of pollution or health disparities at a snapshot in time. In this study, we compare injustices in NO2- and PM2.5-attributable health burdens, considering NO2-attributable health impacts across the entire US; document changing disparities in these health burdens over time (2010–2019); and evaluate how more stringent air quality standards would reduce disparities in health impacts associated with these pollutants.

Methods

Through a health impact assessment, we quantified census tract-level variations in health outcomes attributable to NO2 and PM2.5 using health impact functions that combine demographic data from the US Census Bureau; two spatially resolved pollutant datasets, which fuse satellite data with physical and statistical models; and epidemiologically derived relative risk estimates and incidence rates from the Global Burden of Disease study.

Results

Despite overall decreases in the public health damages associated with NO2 and PM2.5, racial and ethnic relative disparities in NO2-attributable pediatric asthma and PM2.5-attributable premature mortality have widened in the US during the last decade. Racial relative disparities in PM2.5-attributable premature mortality and NO2-attributable pediatric asthma have increased by 16% and 19%, respectively, between 2010 and 2019. Similarly, ethnic relative disparities in PM2.5-attributable premature mortality have increased by 40% and NO2-attributable pediatric asthma by 10%.

Discussion

Enacting and attaining more stringent air quality standards for both pollutants could preferentially benefit the most marginalized and minoritized communities by greatly reducing racial and ethnic relative disparities in pollution-attributable health burdens in the US. Our methods provide a semi-observational approach to track changes in disparities in air pollution and associated health burdens across the US.

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Citation

Hunter Kerr G, van Donkelaar A, Martin RV, et al. Increasing racial and ethnic disparities in ambient air pollution-attributable morbidity and mortality in the United States. Environmental Health Perspectives. 6 March 2024. doi: 10.1289/EHP11900.