Review of epidemiological studies on air pollution and health effects in children

There is a growing body of literature on the adverse health effects of ambient air pollution. Children are more adversely affected by air pollution due to their biological susceptibility and exposure patterns. This review summarized the accumulated epidemiologic evidence with emphasis on studies con...

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Main Author: Jong-Tae Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Korean Pediatric Society 2021-01-01
Series:Clinical and Experimental Pediatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.e-cep.org/upload/pdf/cep-2019-00843.pdf
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spelling doaj-7d7720bf7f3c4087a6f8417466d2cdbe2021-01-06T08:19:44ZengThe Korean Pediatric SocietyClinical and Experimental Pediatrics2713-41482021-01-0164131110.3345/cep.2019.0084320125553659Review of epidemiological studies on air pollution and health effects in childrenJong-Tae Lee0 Division of Health Policy and Management, College of Health Science, Korea University, Seoul, KoreaThere is a growing body of literature on the adverse health effects of ambient air pollution. Children are more adversely affected by air pollution due to their biological susceptibility and exposure patterns. This review summarized the accumulated epidemiologic evidence with emphasis on studies conducted in Korea and heterogeneity in the literature. Based on systematic reviews and meta-analyses, there is consistent evidence on the association between exposure to ambient air pollution and children’s health, especially respiratory health and adverse birth outcomes, and growing evidence on neurodevelopmental outcomes. Despite these existing studies, the mechanism of the adverse health effects of air pollution and the critical window of susceptibility remain unclear. There is also a need to identify causes of heterogeneity between studies in terms of measurement of exposure/outcome, study design, and the differential characteristics of air pollutants and population.http://www.e-cep.org/upload/pdf/cep-2019-00843.pdfair pollutionchildrenrespiratory healthbirth outcomesinfant mortalityneurodevelopment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jong-Tae Lee
spellingShingle Jong-Tae Lee
Review of epidemiological studies on air pollution and health effects in children
Clinical and Experimental Pediatrics
air pollution
children
respiratory health
birth outcomes
infant mortality
neurodevelopment
author_facet Jong-Tae Lee
author_sort Jong-Tae Lee
title Review of epidemiological studies on air pollution and health effects in children
title_short Review of epidemiological studies on air pollution and health effects in children
title_full Review of epidemiological studies on air pollution and health effects in children
title_fullStr Review of epidemiological studies on air pollution and health effects in children
title_full_unstemmed Review of epidemiological studies on air pollution and health effects in children
title_sort review of epidemiological studies on air pollution and health effects in children
publisher The Korean Pediatric Society
series Clinical and Experimental Pediatrics
issn 2713-4148
publishDate 2021-01-01
description There is a growing body of literature on the adverse health effects of ambient air pollution. Children are more adversely affected by air pollution due to their biological susceptibility and exposure patterns. This review summarized the accumulated epidemiologic evidence with emphasis on studies conducted in Korea and heterogeneity in the literature. Based on systematic reviews and meta-analyses, there is consistent evidence on the association between exposure to ambient air pollution and children’s health, especially respiratory health and adverse birth outcomes, and growing evidence on neurodevelopmental outcomes. Despite these existing studies, the mechanism of the adverse health effects of air pollution and the critical window of susceptibility remain unclear. There is also a need to identify causes of heterogeneity between studies in terms of measurement of exposure/outcome, study design, and the differential characteristics of air pollutants and population.
topic air pollution
children
respiratory health
birth outcomes
infant mortality
neurodevelopment
url http://www.e-cep.org/upload/pdf/cep-2019-00843.pdf
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