2020
DOI: 10.3390/atmos11101066
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A Preliminary Spatial Analysis of the Association of Asthma and Traffic-Related Air Pollution in the Metropolitan Area of Calgary, Canada

Abstract: We performed a preliminary spatial analysis to assess the association of asthma emergency visits (AEV) with ambient air pollutants (NO2, PM2.5, PM10, Black Carbon, and VOCs) over Calgary, Canada. Descriptive analyses identify spatial patterns across the city. The spatial patterns of AEV and air pollutants were analyzed by descriptive and spatial statistics (Moran’s I and Getis G). The association between AEV, air pollutants, and socioeconomic status was assessed by correlation and regression. A spatial gradien… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
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“…The city of Calgary, Canada, is a prairie city that is impacted regularly by smoke from wildfires and grass fires [45]. Secondary aerosol formation is responsible for about half of the air pollution in Calgary, while primary emissions come from traffic and industry, including upstream oil and gas activities, construction, agricultural activity and natural gas combustion-mainly for heating residential and commercial buildings [45][46][47]. Taking wind and other weather factors into account, increases in PM 2.5 during winter can be attributed to local combustion, secondary aerosols and nearby industrial sites, whereas summertime elevations are mainly attributable to wildfires [45].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The city of Calgary, Canada, is a prairie city that is impacted regularly by smoke from wildfires and grass fires [45]. Secondary aerosol formation is responsible for about half of the air pollution in Calgary, while primary emissions come from traffic and industry, including upstream oil and gas activities, construction, agricultural activity and natural gas combustion-mainly for heating residential and commercial buildings [45][46][47]. Taking wind and other weather factors into account, increases in PM 2.5 during winter can be attributed to local combustion, secondary aerosols and nearby industrial sites, whereas summertime elevations are mainly attributable to wildfires [45].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Taking wind and other weather factors into account, increases in PM 2.5 during winter can be attributed to local combustion, secondary aerosols and nearby industrial sites, whereas summertime elevations are mainly attributable to wildfires [45]. Asthma exacerbations (all ages, no specification of an asthma population) in Calgary have previously been shown to be increased in areas of poor air quality, where air pollution was attributable to traffic and industry, although the impact of air pollution on children and on people with a preexisting asthma diagnosis was not evaluated [47]. In contrast, in our pediatric asthma cohort, moderately poor air quality (orange zone [33]) appeared protective; one possible explanation is that children with asthma avoid exposures during these periods, however this observation is unexpected and warrants further exploration.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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