1993
DOI: 10.1289/ehp.93101s2229
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A critical review of studies of the association between demands for hospital services and air pollution.

Abstract: Studies of the associations between air pollution and hospital admissions and emergency room use are reviewed, including studies of air pollution episodes, time-series analyses, and cross-sectional analyses. These studies encompass a variety of methods of analysis and levels of air quality. Findings from all three types of studies were generally consistent in that almost all of the studies reviewed found statistically significant associations between hospital use and air pollution; this unanimity may have resu… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(16 citation statements)
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References 71 publications
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“…According to Lipfert (1993Lipfert ( , 1997, the semi-elasticity at the average of both atmospheric pollutant and hospital admission was calculated from the risk difference provided by the slope of the linear regression. The use of the semi-elasticity makes it easier to compare our results, obtained from a linear model, with those obtained from time-series studies using Poisson (Cameron and Trivedi 1998) and log-linear models, which use the Risk Ratio as the measure of effect.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…According to Lipfert (1993Lipfert ( , 1997, the semi-elasticity at the average of both atmospheric pollutant and hospital admission was calculated from the risk difference provided by the slope of the linear regression. The use of the semi-elasticity makes it easier to compare our results, obtained from a linear model, with those obtained from time-series studies using Poisson (Cameron and Trivedi 1998) and log-linear models, which use the Risk Ratio as the measure of effect.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The daily data may consist of the actual daily values of health and pollution or some form of average over a number of days. Some studies have modelled single day health events with exposure averages over multiple days (Lipfert 1993;Lumley and Sheppard 2000;Roberts 2005;Sarmento et al 2009;Smith et al 2000) and a minority has modelled the health events also as averages over multiple days, while preserving the days as units of comparison (Schwartz 2000a, b).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…30,[45][46][47][48][49] Here, Y i will signify the number of hospital admissions for day i = 1, 2, …, n. X = [x 1 ,…, x p ] denotes the (n x p) design matrix based on all covariates under consideration being x j = [x j;1 ,…, x j;i ; …; x j;n ] T . The design matrix X can include basic terms for smoothing splines to model nonlinear trends, meteorological and pollution variables, seasonal and weekly indicators, among others.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The significant ones were selected by considering those relationships where the p value of the slope of AP was less than 5% for at least one of the models and when the slope of the AP had the same sign for all 4 models. According to Lipfert (1993Lipfert ( , 1997, and in order to express the effect of AP on HA, the semielasticity at the mean of both AP and HA was calculated from the risk difference provided by the slope of the linear regression. The use of the semi-elasticity makes it easier to compare our results, obtained from a linear model, with those obtained from time-series studies using Poisson and log-linear models, which use the Risk Ratio as the measure of effect.…”
Section: Effects Of Ap Exposure On Hamentioning
confidence: 99%