Short-term association among meteorological variation, outdoor air pollution and acute bronchiolitis in children in a subtropical setting

Author:

Leung Shuk Yu,Lau Steven Yuk Fai,Kwok Ka Li,Mohammad Kirran N.,Chan Paul Kay Sheung,Chong Ka ChunORCID

Abstract

ObjectivesTo examine the association among acute bronchiolitis-related hospitalisation in children, meteorological variation and outdoor air pollution.MethodsWe obtained the daily counts of acute bronchiolitis-related admission of children≤2 years old from all public hospitals, meteorological data and outdoor air pollutants’ concentrations between 1 January 2008 and 31 December 2017 in Hong Kong. We used quasi-Poisson generalised additive models together with distributed lag non-linear models to estimate the associations of interest adjusted for confounders.ResultsA total of 29 688 admissions were included in the analysis. Increased adjusted relative risk (ARR) of acute bronchiolitis-related hospitalisation was associated with high temperature (ambient temperature and apparent temperature) and was marginally associated with high vapour pressure, a proxy for absolute humidity. High concentration of NO2 was associated with elevated risk of acute bronchiolitis admission; the risk of bronchiolitis hospitalisation increased statistically significantly with cumulative NO2 exposure over the range 66.2–119.6 µg/m3. For PM10, the significant effect observed at high concentrations appears to be immediate but not long lasting. For SO2, ARR increased as the concentration approached the 75th percentile and then decreased though the association was insignificant.ConclusionsAcute bronchiolitis-related hospitalisation among children was associated with temperature and exposure to NO2 and PM10 at different lag times, suggesting a need to adopt sustainable clean air policies, especially to target pollutants produced by motor vehicles, to protect young children’s health.

Funder

Health and Medical Research Fund

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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