Cardiovascular diseases in Europe: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 11:52, 14 March 2007
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Scope
Cardiovascular morbidity/mortality describes
Description
Cardiovascular morbidity and mortality has been associated with noise as well as with air pollution exposure.
Cardiovascular morbidity can include a variety of related endpoints including hypertension, angina pectoris, myocardial infarction etc. We make use of existing review papers on this subject to select ERFs. Please note that this is not the 'formal' and appropriate way to make a selection of ERfs, see protocol WP 1.3.
References
- Van Kempen et al (2005), Selection and evaluation of exposure-effectrelationships for health impact assessment in the field of noise and health
- Van Kempen et al (2002) The association between noise exposure and blood pressure and ischemic heart disease: a meta-analysis
- Anderson HR et al. Meta-analysis of time-series and panel studies of Particulate Matter (PM) and Ozone (O3): report of a WHO task group. WHO Regional Office for Europe, 2004. Accessed 11 November 2005.
Definition
Causality
- We need the noise exposure in dB(A)
- We need the air pollution (pm2.5,O3, CO?) exposure in microgram/m3
List of parents:
Data
Formula
Noise and hypertension: A relative risk of noise exposure per 5 dB(A) and the prevalence of hypertension of 1.26 (95% CI 1.14-1.39) was chosen
PM10 and cardiovascular mortality (all ages) A relative risk of PM10 per 10 microgram/m3 and cardiovascular mortality of 1.009 (1.005-1.013) was chosen
Ozone (8-hour) and cardiovascular mortality (all ages) A relative risk of Ozone per 10 microgram/m3 and cardiovascular mortality of 1.004 (1.003-1.005) was chosen