环境卫生
呼吸系统
过敏
环境科学
城市热岛
医学
免疫学
地理
气象学
内科学
作者
Zhiping Niu,Xiaofeng Fang,Sun Jin,Shuang Du,Hao Tang,Wenpu Shao,Tianyi Chen,Jing Nie,Zhaowu Yu,Xihan Yao,X. Y. Niu,Dan Norbäck,Xin Zhang,Chan Lu,Ling Zhang,Wei Yu,Xiaohong Zheng,Tingting Wang,Tippawan Prapamontol,Juan Wang
标识
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.5c02190
摘要
Anthropogenic heat (AH) exerts a substantial influence on the local urban climate and intensifies the urban heat island (UHI) effect. However, the impact of AH exposure on respiratory allergy symptoms in preschool children has not been investigated. This study conducted a cross-sectional study of 39088 Chinese preschool children to investigate the associations between multisource AH exposure (building heat, industrial heat, metabolic heat, transportation heat, and total heat) and the risks of respiratory allergy symptoms (wheezing, night-cough, and rhinitis). Exposure to higher levels of AH was associated with increased risks of wheezing (building heat, transportation heat, and total heat), night-cough (building heat), and rhinitis (building heat, metabolic heat, transportation heat, and total heat) symptoms. Exposure-response relationships demonstrated positive relationships between AH with wheezing, night-cough, and rhinitis symptoms, with nearly linear and inverted "J" shapes. Building heat contributed most to the impact of multisource AH on wheezing, night-cough, and rhinitis symptoms, with weighted quantile sum weights ranging from 0.513 to 0.887. Our study provided new epidemiological insights into the impact of the UHI effect on childhood respiratory allergies and highlighted that mitigating AH exposure, specifically from building heat, could be an effective strategy for reducing the disease burden of respiratory allergies in children.
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