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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Quantifying the health impacts of outdoor air pollution: useful estimations for public health action

Ferran BallesterOlivier ChanelSylvia MedinaChristophe DeclercqMathilde Pascal

subject

Quality Controlmedicine.medical_specialtyEpidemiologyPopulation010501 environmental sciencesWorld Health Organization01 natural sciencesRisk Assessment[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineEnvironmental healthAir Pollution11. SustainabilitymedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineeducationHealth policyComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS0105 earth and related environmental scienceseducation.field_of_studyAir Pollutantsbusiness.industryPublic healthPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthUrban HealthEnvironmental exposureEnvironmental Exposure[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceHealth indicator3. Good healthEurope13. Climate actionEpidemiological MonitoringPublic Health PracticeHealth Impact AssessmentEpidemiological MonitoringbusinessRisk assessmentHealth impact assessmentEnvironmental Monitoring

description

According to WHO,1 health impact assessment (HIA) is A combination of procedures, methods and tools used to evaluate the potential health effects of a policy, programme or project. Using qualitative, quantitative and participatory techniques, HIA aims to produce recommendations that will help decision makers and other stakeholders make choices about alternatives and improvements to prevent disease/injury, and to actively promote health. The typical procedural steps in HIA include screening, scoping, assessment of health effects, recommending alternatives and mitigations, reporting and monitoring.2 Each step helps predict or foresee potential effects of policy decisions on a population's health. In specific, quantitative risk assessment, an essential component of HIA, provides estimations of the potential health risks or impacts associated with a variety of hazards.3–6 Since the beginning of HIA development, environmental risk factors have been one of the targeted groups of health determinants—besides the social ones. In this commentary, we would like to discuss some methodological aspects and potential uses of the quantitative estimation of the health impact of outdoor air pollution. In recent years, this hazard has been one of the environmental factors most frequently quantified using HIA because the toxicological and epidemiological evidence supports a strong causal relationship between exposure and health effects.7 Since the individual risk from air pollution is relatively low while the whole population is exposed, HIA provides a clearer view of its impact on public health.8 The classical HIA method, derived from the WHO-HIA general method,9 quantifies the impact on health of short-term and long-term exposures to air pollution using four successive steps: (1) selecting concentration-response functions (ie, relative risks, (RRs)) from epidemiological studies; (2) estimating the distribution of exposure levels in the population studied; (3) collecting data on the prevalence or incidence of selected health indicators and, finally, (4) calculating …

10.1136/jech-2011-200908https://hal-amu.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01500873