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Ambient air pollution exposure and the incidence of related health effects among racial/ethnic minorities
Author(s) -
L.A. Nieves,
Dee R. Wernette
Publication year - 1997
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/432915
Subject(s) - ethnic group , air pollution , environmental health , residence , incidence (geometry) , population , demography , circumstantial evidence , medicine , geography , ecology , biology , physics , archaeology , sociology , anthropology , optics
Differences among racial and ethnic groups in morbidity and mortality rates for diseases, including diseases with environmental causes, have been extensively documented. However, documenting the linkages between environmental contaminants, individual exposures, and disease incidence has been hindered by difficulties in measuring exposure for the population in general and for minority populations in particular. After briefly discussing research findings on associations of common air pollutants with disease incidence, the authors summarize recent studies of radial/ethnic subgroup differences in incidence of these diseases in the US. They then present evidence of both historic and current patterns of disproportionate minority group exposure to air pollution as measured by residence in areas where ambient air quality standards are violated. The current indications of disproportionate potential exposures of minority and low-income populations to air pollutants represent the continuation of a historical trend. The evidence of linkage between disproportionate exposure to air pollution of racial/ethnic minorities and low-income groups and their higher rates of some air pollution-related diseases is largely circumstantial. Differences in disease incidence and mortality rates among racial/ethnic groups are discussed for respiratory diseases, cancers, and lead poisoning. Pollutants of concern include CO, Pb, SO{sub 2}, O{sub 3}, and particulates

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