A scalar-on-quantile-function approach for estimating short-term health effects of environmental exposures

Author:

Zhang Yuzi1ORCID,Chang Howard H1ORCID,Warren Joshua L2ORCID,Ebelt Stefanie T3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Emory University , Atlanta, GA 30322 , United States

2. Department of Biostatistics, Yale University , New Haven, CT 06511 , United States

3. Gangarosa Department of Environmental Health, Emory University , Atlanta, GA 30322 , United States

Abstract

ABSTRACT Environmental epidemiologic studies routinely utilize aggregate health outcomes to estimate effects of short-term (eg, daily) exposures that are available at increasingly fine spatial resolutions. However, areal averages are typically used to derive population-level exposure, which cannot capture the spatial variation and individual heterogeneity in exposures that may occur within the spatial and temporal unit of interest (eg, within a day or ZIP code). We propose a general modeling approach to incorporate within-unit exposure heterogeneity in health analyses via exposure quantile functions. Furthermore, by viewing the exposure quantile function as a functional covariate, our approach provides additional flexibility in characterizing associations at different quantile levels. We apply the proposed approach to an analysis of air pollution and emergency department (ED) visits in Atlanta over 4 years. The analysis utilizes daily ZIP code-level distributions of personal exposures to 4 traffic-related ambient air pollutants simulated from the Stochastic Human Exposure and Dose Simulator. Our analyses find that effects of carbon monoxide on respiratory and cardiovascular disease ED visits are more pronounced with changes in lower quantiles of the population’s exposure. Software for implement is provided in the R package nbRegQF.

Funder

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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