Airborne Coarse Particles and Mortality

2000 
Some recent epidemiologic studies suggest a stronger effect of fine particles (PM2.5) than of coarser particulate matter. To examine the support for such a differential effect, the authors conducted a daily time-series analysis of mortality in relation to measurements of PM2.5, PM10, and PM10-2.5 in southwestern Mexico City in the years 1992–1995. A generalized linear model based on Poisson regression was used to control for weather and periodic cycles, and the average concentration of the previous five days was the index of particle exposure. The mean concentrations of PM 2.5 and PM10 were 27.4 μg m−3 and 44.6 μg m-3, respectively, and the mean concentration of PM10-2.5 was 17.2 μg m-PM10 was highly correlated with both the fine and coarse fractions, but PM 2.5 and PM 10–2.5 were rather weakly correlated with each other (correlation coefficient 0.52). All three particle size fractions were associated individually with mortality: a 10-μg m3 increase in PM10 Supported by cooperative agreements CR-820076 an...
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