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Reprint of: The spatial-temporal characteristics and health impacts of ambient fine particulate matter in China

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Reprint of: The spatial-temporal characteristics and health impacts of ambient fine particulate matter in China. / Song, Yingshi; Wang, Xiaoke; Maher, Barbara A. et al.
In: Journal of Cleaner Production, Vol. 163, No. Suppl. , 01.10.2017, p. S352-S358.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Song, Y, Wang, X, Maher, BA, Li, F, Xu, C, Liu, X, Sun, X & Zhang, Z 2017, 'Reprint of: The spatial-temporal characteristics and health impacts of ambient fine particulate matter in China', Journal of Cleaner Production, vol. 163, no. Suppl. , pp. S352-S358. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.05.145

APA

Song, Y., Wang, X., Maher, B. A., Li, F., Xu, C., Liu, X., Sun, X., & Zhang, Z. (2017). Reprint of: The spatial-temporal characteristics and health impacts of ambient fine particulate matter in China. Journal of Cleaner Production, 163(Suppl. ), S352-S358. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.05.145

Vancouver

Song Y, Wang X, Maher BA, Li F, Xu C, Liu X et al. Reprint of: The spatial-temporal characteristics and health impacts of ambient fine particulate matter in China. Journal of Cleaner Production. 2017 Oct 1;163(Suppl. ):S352-S358. doi: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.05.145

Author

Song, Yingshi ; Wang, Xiaoke ; Maher, Barbara A. et al. / Reprint of : The spatial-temporal characteristics and health impacts of ambient fine particulate matter in China. In: Journal of Cleaner Production. 2017 ; Vol. 163, No. Suppl. . pp. S352-S358.

Bibtex

@article{a3f6e36b05624e0d93696e1e59eb6383,
title = "Reprint of: The spatial-temporal characteristics and health impacts of ambient fine particulate matter in China",
abstract = "Airborne particulate matter presents a serious health threat to human beings, but in China there have until now been few epidemiological studies, especially regarding the impact of ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5). This study explored first the temporal and spatial characteristics of ambient airborne PM2.5 in China, 2013. Mortality, respiratory diseases, cardiovascular diseases, and chronic bronchitis were then evaluated as four health endpoints attributed to PM2.5. The results showed that the average annual PM2.5 concentration was 72.71 μg/m3; the PM2.5 concentration was below 35 μg/m3 for only 6% of the time, for the whole year. In terms of the PM2.5 concentration, January (133.10 μg/m3) and December (120.19 μg/m3) were the most polluted months, whereas July (38.76 μg/m3) and August (41.31 μg/m3) were the least polluted months. The most highly polluted areas were concentrated in North China. In terms of the health endpoints attributable to PM2.5, there were 763,595 mortality, 149,754 cardiovascular diseases, 446,035 respiratory diseases, and 2,389,035 chronic bronchitis cases. Results were very important to clarify the current PM2.5 pollution situation and the health impact of PM2.5 in China. And also provided a reference for the assessing damage caused by PM2.5 pollution.",
keywords = "Air pollution, China, Fine particulate matter, Health impact",
author = "Yingshi Song and Xiaoke Wang and Maher, {Barbara A.} and Feng Li and Chongqi Xu and Xusheng Liu and Xiao Sun and Zeyang Zhang",
year = "2017",
month = oct,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.05.145",
language = "English",
volume = "163",
pages = "S352--S358",
journal = "Journal of Cleaner Production",
issn = "0959-6526",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",
number = "Suppl. ",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Reprint of

T2 - The spatial-temporal characteristics and health impacts of ambient fine particulate matter in China

AU - Song, Yingshi

AU - Wang, Xiaoke

AU - Maher, Barbara A.

AU - Li, Feng

AU - Xu, Chongqi

AU - Liu, Xusheng

AU - Sun, Xiao

AU - Zhang, Zeyang

PY - 2017/10/1

Y1 - 2017/10/1

N2 - Airborne particulate matter presents a serious health threat to human beings, but in China there have until now been few epidemiological studies, especially regarding the impact of ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5). This study explored first the temporal and spatial characteristics of ambient airborne PM2.5 in China, 2013. Mortality, respiratory diseases, cardiovascular diseases, and chronic bronchitis were then evaluated as four health endpoints attributed to PM2.5. The results showed that the average annual PM2.5 concentration was 72.71 μg/m3; the PM2.5 concentration was below 35 μg/m3 for only 6% of the time, for the whole year. In terms of the PM2.5 concentration, January (133.10 μg/m3) and December (120.19 μg/m3) were the most polluted months, whereas July (38.76 μg/m3) and August (41.31 μg/m3) were the least polluted months. The most highly polluted areas were concentrated in North China. In terms of the health endpoints attributable to PM2.5, there were 763,595 mortality, 149,754 cardiovascular diseases, 446,035 respiratory diseases, and 2,389,035 chronic bronchitis cases. Results were very important to clarify the current PM2.5 pollution situation and the health impact of PM2.5 in China. And also provided a reference for the assessing damage caused by PM2.5 pollution.

AB - Airborne particulate matter presents a serious health threat to human beings, but in China there have until now been few epidemiological studies, especially regarding the impact of ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5). This study explored first the temporal and spatial characteristics of ambient airborne PM2.5 in China, 2013. Mortality, respiratory diseases, cardiovascular diseases, and chronic bronchitis were then evaluated as four health endpoints attributed to PM2.5. The results showed that the average annual PM2.5 concentration was 72.71 μg/m3; the PM2.5 concentration was below 35 μg/m3 for only 6% of the time, for the whole year. In terms of the PM2.5 concentration, January (133.10 μg/m3) and December (120.19 μg/m3) were the most polluted months, whereas July (38.76 μg/m3) and August (41.31 μg/m3) were the least polluted months. The most highly polluted areas were concentrated in North China. In terms of the health endpoints attributable to PM2.5, there were 763,595 mortality, 149,754 cardiovascular diseases, 446,035 respiratory diseases, and 2,389,035 chronic bronchitis cases. Results were very important to clarify the current PM2.5 pollution situation and the health impact of PM2.5 in China. And also provided a reference for the assessing damage caused by PM2.5 pollution.

KW - Air pollution

KW - China

KW - Fine particulate matter

KW - Health impact

U2 - 10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.05.145

DO - 10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.05.145

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85042222662

VL - 163

SP - S352-S358

JO - Journal of Cleaner Production

JF - Journal of Cleaner Production

SN - 0959-6526

IS - Suppl.

ER -