A National County-Level Assessment of U.S. Nursing Facility Characteristics Associated with Long-Term Exposure to Traffic Pollution in Older Adults
Long-term exposure to ambient air pollution increases disease risk in older adults. Nursing facilities located near major roadways potentially expose older adults to traffic pollution. No studies, however, have described the association between nursing facilities and traffic pollution. We obtained d...
Main Authors: | , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
MDPI AG
2018-03-01
|
Series: | International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/15/3/487 |
id |
doaj-869ac736ad7749e1b5c493d840b2805b |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-869ac736ad7749e1b5c493d840b2805b2020-11-24T23:06:37ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1660-46012018-03-0115348710.3390/ijerph15030487ijerph15030487A National County-Level Assessment of U.S. Nursing Facility Characteristics Associated with Long-Term Exposure to Traffic Pollution in Older AdultsYi Wang0Hao Fan1Rudy Banerjee2Anne M. Weaver3Michael Weiner4Department of Environmental Health Science, Indiana University Fairbanks, School of Public Health, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USADepartment of Environmental Health Science, Indiana University Fairbanks, School of Public Health, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USADepartment of Geography, School of Liberal Arts, Indiana University-Purdue University in Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USADepartment of Environmental Health Science, Indiana University Fairbanks, School of Public Health, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USADepartment of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USALong-term exposure to ambient air pollution increases disease risk in older adults. Nursing facilities located near major roadways potentially expose older adults to traffic pollution. No studies, however, have described the association between nursing facilities and traffic pollution. We obtained data on facility- and census-tract-level characteristics of 15,706 U.S. facilities from the Medicare Nursing Home Compare datasets. We calculated distance to major roadways and traffic density for each facility. In the contiguous U.S. (as of 2014), 345,792 older adults, about 27% of residents in non-hospital facilities, lived within 150 m major roadways (A1 or A2) in 3876 (28% of sampled) facilities. Nationally, for-profit facilities, high-occupancy facilities, and facilities in census tracts with higher percentages of minorities were more likely to have higher exposure to traffic. Counties in Virginia, New York City, and Rhode Island have the highest percent of residents and facilities near major roads. Nationally, over one-quarter of sampled facilities are located near major roadways. Attributes potentially associated with higher exposure to traffic included “for-profit” and “higher minority census tract”. Proximity to major roadways may be an important factor to consider in siting nursing facilities. Our results inform potential intervention strategy at both county and facility level.http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/15/3/487traffic pollutionnursing homeindoor airminorityoccupancyprofit |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Yi Wang Hao Fan Rudy Banerjee Anne M. Weaver Michael Weiner |
spellingShingle |
Yi Wang Hao Fan Rudy Banerjee Anne M. Weaver Michael Weiner A National County-Level Assessment of U.S. Nursing Facility Characteristics Associated with Long-Term Exposure to Traffic Pollution in Older Adults International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health traffic pollution nursing home indoor air minority occupancy profit |
author_facet |
Yi Wang Hao Fan Rudy Banerjee Anne M. Weaver Michael Weiner |
author_sort |
Yi Wang |
title |
A National County-Level Assessment of U.S. Nursing Facility Characteristics Associated with Long-Term Exposure to Traffic Pollution in Older Adults |
title_short |
A National County-Level Assessment of U.S. Nursing Facility Characteristics Associated with Long-Term Exposure to Traffic Pollution in Older Adults |
title_full |
A National County-Level Assessment of U.S. Nursing Facility Characteristics Associated with Long-Term Exposure to Traffic Pollution in Older Adults |
title_fullStr |
A National County-Level Assessment of U.S. Nursing Facility Characteristics Associated with Long-Term Exposure to Traffic Pollution in Older Adults |
title_full_unstemmed |
A National County-Level Assessment of U.S. Nursing Facility Characteristics Associated with Long-Term Exposure to Traffic Pollution in Older Adults |
title_sort |
national county-level assessment of u.s. nursing facility characteristics associated with long-term exposure to traffic pollution in older adults |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health |
issn |
1660-4601 |
publishDate |
2018-03-01 |
description |
Long-term exposure to ambient air pollution increases disease risk in older adults. Nursing facilities located near major roadways potentially expose older adults to traffic pollution. No studies, however, have described the association between nursing facilities and traffic pollution. We obtained data on facility- and census-tract-level characteristics of 15,706 U.S. facilities from the Medicare Nursing Home Compare datasets. We calculated distance to major roadways and traffic density for each facility. In the contiguous U.S. (as of 2014), 345,792 older adults, about 27% of residents in non-hospital facilities, lived within 150 m major roadways (A1 or A2) in 3876 (28% of sampled) facilities. Nationally, for-profit facilities, high-occupancy facilities, and facilities in census tracts with higher percentages of minorities were more likely to have higher exposure to traffic. Counties in Virginia, New York City, and Rhode Island have the highest percent of residents and facilities near major roads. Nationally, over one-quarter of sampled facilities are located near major roadways. Attributes potentially associated with higher exposure to traffic included “for-profit” and “higher minority census tract”. Proximity to major roadways may be an important factor to consider in siting nursing facilities. Our results inform potential intervention strategy at both county and facility level. |
topic |
traffic pollution nursing home indoor air minority occupancy profit |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/15/3/487 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT yiwang anationalcountylevelassessmentofusnursingfacilitycharacteristicsassociatedwithlongtermexposuretotrafficpollutioninolderadults AT haofan anationalcountylevelassessmentofusnursingfacilitycharacteristicsassociatedwithlongtermexposuretotrafficpollutioninolderadults AT rudybanerjee anationalcountylevelassessmentofusnursingfacilitycharacteristicsassociatedwithlongtermexposuretotrafficpollutioninolderadults AT annemweaver anationalcountylevelassessmentofusnursingfacilitycharacteristicsassociatedwithlongtermexposuretotrafficpollutioninolderadults AT michaelweiner anationalcountylevelassessmentofusnursingfacilitycharacteristicsassociatedwithlongtermexposuretotrafficpollutioninolderadults AT yiwang nationalcountylevelassessmentofusnursingfacilitycharacteristicsassociatedwithlongtermexposuretotrafficpollutioninolderadults AT haofan nationalcountylevelassessmentofusnursingfacilitycharacteristicsassociatedwithlongtermexposuretotrafficpollutioninolderadults AT rudybanerjee nationalcountylevelassessmentofusnursingfacilitycharacteristicsassociatedwithlongtermexposuretotrafficpollutioninolderadults AT annemweaver nationalcountylevelassessmentofusnursingfacilitycharacteristicsassociatedwithlongtermexposuretotrafficpollutioninolderadults AT michaelweiner nationalcountylevelassessmentofusnursingfacilitycharacteristicsassociatedwithlongtermexposuretotrafficpollutioninolderadults |
_version_ |
1725622105942261760 |