Changes in emergency department visits for respiratory and cardiovascular disease after closure of a coking operation near Pittsburgh, PA

Introduction: In Allegheny County (AC), PA, US, closure of a large coke plant in January 2016 presented an opportunity to investigate the contribution of air pollutants to health outcomes in a nearby community. Materials and methods: The Allegheny County Health Department, (ACHD), Division of Air Q...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Luann Brink, Lynne Pavlik Marshall, Karen Hacker, Evelyn Talbott
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tehran University of Medical Sciences 2020-01-01
Series:Journal of Air Pollution and Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://japh.tums.ac.ir/index.php/japh/article/view/216
id doaj-a7d18adb35914b688dc5b24d581ebdd3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a7d18adb35914b688dc5b24d581ebdd32020-11-25T04:11:57ZengTehran University of Medical SciencesJournal of Air Pollution and Health2476-30712020-01-014410.18502/japh.v4i4.2195Changes in emergency department visits for respiratory and cardiovascular disease after closure of a coking operation near Pittsburgh, PALuann Brink0Lynne Pavlik Marshall1Karen Hacker2Evelyn Talbott3Allegheny County Health Department, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United StatesDepartment of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United StatesDepartment of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United StatesDepartment of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States Introduction: In Allegheny County (AC), PA, US, closure of a large coke plant in January 2016 presented an opportunity to investigate the contribution of air pollutants to health outcomes in a nearby community. Materials and methods: The Allegheny County Health Department, (ACHD), Division of Air Quality, had begun monitoring pollutants near the plant since June 2011. The rates of hospitalizations and ED visits for cardiovascular and respiratory disease were compared in the exposed community and two control areas: exposed control, with another coking operation; and unexposed control. Results: Of the study and two control areas, particulate matter concentrations decreased the most in the study area, from 10.9 µg/m3 to 9.7 µg/m3. Benzene decreased substantially in that area, from 0.27 ppm to 0.10 ppm. ED visits for cardiovascular, respiratory, and asthma were significantly higher in the exposed group in 2015 compared to 2016. There were no temporal differences in either control groups. There was a 26.5% decrease in cardiovascular ED visits, a 37.9% decrease in respiratory ED visits, and a 3-5 fold decrease in ED visits due to asthma. These decreases were not seen in exposed and unexposed control areas. A case-crossover analysis confirmed that daily ED visits were significantly associated with daily particulate matter levels, controlling for temperature. Conclusion: With the closure of a large Coke Plant facility, we found that a modest decrease in particulate matter and a notable decrease in benzene concentration were associated with a significant decrease in emergency room visits not previously documented in other studies.  https://japh.tums.ac.ir/index.php/japh/article/view/216Natural experiment;Epidemiology;Particulate matter
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luann Brink
Lynne Pavlik Marshall
Karen Hacker
Evelyn Talbott
spellingShingle Luann Brink
Lynne Pavlik Marshall
Karen Hacker
Evelyn Talbott
Changes in emergency department visits for respiratory and cardiovascular disease after closure of a coking operation near Pittsburgh, PA
Journal of Air Pollution and Health
Natural experiment;
Epidemiology;
Particulate matter
author_facet Luann Brink
Lynne Pavlik Marshall
Karen Hacker
Evelyn Talbott
author_sort Luann Brink
title Changes in emergency department visits for respiratory and cardiovascular disease after closure of a coking operation near Pittsburgh, PA
title_short Changes in emergency department visits for respiratory and cardiovascular disease after closure of a coking operation near Pittsburgh, PA
title_full Changes in emergency department visits for respiratory and cardiovascular disease after closure of a coking operation near Pittsburgh, PA
title_fullStr Changes in emergency department visits for respiratory and cardiovascular disease after closure of a coking operation near Pittsburgh, PA
title_full_unstemmed Changes in emergency department visits for respiratory and cardiovascular disease after closure of a coking operation near Pittsburgh, PA
title_sort changes in emergency department visits for respiratory and cardiovascular disease after closure of a coking operation near pittsburgh, pa
publisher Tehran University of Medical Sciences
series Journal of Air Pollution and Health
issn 2476-3071
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Introduction: In Allegheny County (AC), PA, US, closure of a large coke plant in January 2016 presented an opportunity to investigate the contribution of air pollutants to health outcomes in a nearby community. Materials and methods: The Allegheny County Health Department, (ACHD), Division of Air Quality, had begun monitoring pollutants near the plant since June 2011. The rates of hospitalizations and ED visits for cardiovascular and respiratory disease were compared in the exposed community and two control areas: exposed control, with another coking operation; and unexposed control. Results: Of the study and two control areas, particulate matter concentrations decreased the most in the study area, from 10.9 µg/m3 to 9.7 µg/m3. Benzene decreased substantially in that area, from 0.27 ppm to 0.10 ppm. ED visits for cardiovascular, respiratory, and asthma were significantly higher in the exposed group in 2015 compared to 2016. There were no temporal differences in either control groups. There was a 26.5% decrease in cardiovascular ED visits, a 37.9% decrease in respiratory ED visits, and a 3-5 fold decrease in ED visits due to asthma. These decreases were not seen in exposed and unexposed control areas. A case-crossover analysis confirmed that daily ED visits were significantly associated with daily particulate matter levels, controlling for temperature. Conclusion: With the closure of a large Coke Plant facility, we found that a modest decrease in particulate matter and a notable decrease in benzene concentration were associated with a significant decrease in emergency room visits not previously documented in other studies. 
topic Natural experiment;
Epidemiology;
Particulate matter
url https://japh.tums.ac.ir/index.php/japh/article/view/216
work_keys_str_mv AT luannbrink changesinemergencydepartmentvisitsforrespiratoryandcardiovasculardiseaseafterclosureofacokingoperationnearpittsburghpa
AT lynnepavlikmarshall changesinemergencydepartmentvisitsforrespiratoryandcardiovasculardiseaseafterclosureofacokingoperationnearpittsburghpa
AT karenhacker changesinemergencydepartmentvisitsforrespiratoryandcardiovasculardiseaseafterclosureofacokingoperationnearpittsburghpa
AT evelyntalbott changesinemergencydepartmentvisitsforrespiratoryandcardiovasculardiseaseafterclosureofacokingoperationnearpittsburghpa
_version_ 1724416395603607552