OBJECTIVES: The Swiss Cohort Study on Air Pollution and Lung Diseases in Adults (SAPALDIA) was designed to investigate the health effects from long-term exposure to air pollution. METHODS: The health assessment at recruitment (1991) and at the first reassessment (2001-3) consisted of an interview about respiratory health, occupational and other exposures, spirometry, a methacholine bronchial challenge test, end-expiratory carbon monoxide (CO) measurement and measurement for atopy. A bio bank for DNA and blood markers was established. Heart rate variability was measured using a 24-hour ECG (Holter) in a random sample of participants aged 50 years and older. Concentrations of nitrogen dioxide (NO2), sulphur dioxide (SO2), ozone (O3) and particulates in ambient air have been monitored in all study areas since 1991. Residential histories collected over the 11 year follow-up period coupled with GIS modelling will provide individual long-term air pollutant exposure estimates. RESULTS: Of 9651 participants examined in 1991, 8715 could be traced for the cohort study and 283 died. Basic information about health status was obtained for 8047 individuals (86% of alive persons), 6 528 individuals (70%) agreed to the health examination and 5 973 subjects (62%) completed the entire protocol. Non-participants in the reassessment were on average younger than participants and more likely to have been smokers and to have reported respiratory symptoms in the first assessment. Average weight had increased by 5.5 kg in 11 years and 28% of smokers in 1991 had quit by the time of the reassessment. The most powerful approach for studying long-term effects from ambient air pollution on health is the long-term prospective follow-up of well-defined population-based cohorts with well-characterized air pollution exposure information (European Science Foundation 1998). There are currently only five cohort studies in adults, with published results, that address the long-term impact of air pollution (Abbey et al. 1999;Dockery et al. 1993;Finkelstein et al. 2004;Hoek et al. 2002; Pope et al. 2002;. All studies but one are based in the US and three of them (Dockery et al. 1993;Hoek et al. 2002; Pope et al. 2002), have only published findings related to mortality. The relation of longterm exposure to air pollution with respiratory and cardiovascular health and morbidity has yet to be measured in a large prospective cohort study in Europe. The large European Community Respiratory Health Survey (ECRHS) de- Probst-Hensch NM, et al. Follow-up of SAPALDIA 2, 1991-2003 signed to measure natural history and risk factors for respiratory diseases (particularly asthma and allergy) across Europe has recently included air pollution exposure assessment in its protocol (Burney et al. 1994;Hazenkamp-von Arx et al. 2004). However, the Swiss Cohort Study on Air Pollution and Lung Diseases in Adults (SAPALDIA) is the only prospective cohort study of respiratory and cardiovascular health in adults in Europe with detailed individual residential exposure hi...
PURPOSE: To estimate the impact of traffic-related noise annoyance on health-related quality of life (HrQoL) in a population-based study and potential effect modification by gender. METHODS: The study included 5,021 participants of the Swiss Cohort Study of Air Pollution and Lung Disease in Adults second survey. The association between traffic-related noise annoyance, measured on an 11-point scale, and HrQoL, based on SF-36 scores, was investigated by multivariate regression analysis. Effect sizes were calculated, and interactions by gender and chronic disease status examined. RESULTS: Thirteen percentage of the study population reported high annoyance due to traffic. Women were more likely to report high noise annoyance (adjOR 1.23; 95%CI 1.01-1.48). Except for general health, all SF-36 scores showed a significant negative association with noise annoyance. The respective effect sizes ranged between 0.13 and 0.54. Significant effect modification by gender and chronic disease status was present in specific SF-36 domains. CONCLUSION: This paper presents first evidence of an inverse relationship of noise annoyance and HrQoL in a general population. Although the estimated effects are small to moderate for individuals, they may add up to a relevant public health impact
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