Effect of air pollution on daily morbidity in Karachi, Pakistan
Author(s) -
Haider A. Khwaja,
Zafar Fatmi,
Daniel Malashock,
Zafar Aminov,
Ambreen Kazi,
Azhar Siddique,
Jahan Zeb,
David O. Carpenter
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of local and global health science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2223-0440
DOI - 10.5339/jlghs.2012.3
Subject(s) - medicine , air quality index , environmental health , demography , toxicology , geography , meteorology , sociology , biology
Levels of daily particulates (PM2.5) were monitored at two sites in Karachi, Pakistan. One site (Korangi) is an industrial and residential neighborhood, while the other (Tibet Center) is a commercial and residential area near a major highway. Monitoring was done daily for a period of six weeks during spring, summer, fall and winter. Particulate levels were extraordinarily high, with the great majority of days falling into the “unhealthy for sensitive groups” or “very unhealthy” categories. The mean PM2.5 levels in Karachi exceeded the WHO’s 24 hour air quality guideline almost every day and often by a factor of greater than 5-fold. Daily emergency room (ER) visits and hospital admissions for cardiovascular diseases were obtained by review of medical records at three major tertiary and specialized hospitals. ER and hospitalizations were reported relative to days in which the concentration of PM2.5 was less than 50 µg/m3, and by 50 µg/m3 increments up to 300 µg/m3. There were statistically significant elevations in rates of hospital admissions at each of the PM2.5 categories at the Korangi site, and at concentrations >150 µg/m3 at the Tibet Center site. ER visits were significantly elevated only at PM2.5 concentrations of between 151 and 200 µg/m3 at both sites. These results show that the extremely elevated concentrations of PM2.5 in Karachi, Pakistan are, as expected, associated with significantly elevated rates of hospital admission, and to a lesser extent, ER visits for cardiovascular disease
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