PM10

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Petr75
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Re: PM10

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Progway 2025/5
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Petr75
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Posts: 2149
Joined: Sat Oct 19, 2013 10:17 am
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Re: PM10

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2025
Can greenspace modify the combined effects of multiple air pollutants on pulmonary tuberculosis treatment outcomes? An empirical study conducted in Zhejiang Province, China
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40335316/

Conclusions: Combined air pollutants significantly impede successful PTB treatment outcomes, with O3 and PM2.5 accounting for nearly 75% of this detrimental effect. Moderate levels of greenspace can mitigate the adverse effects associated with combined air pollutants, leading to improved treatment success for patients with PTB.
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Petr75
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Posts: 2149
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Re: PM10

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2025 May 5
How air pollution affects cause-specific emergency hospital admissions on days with biomass combustion in Spain?
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40328061/

Abstract

Although wildfires are growing in number, intensity and extent due to climate change, few studies have been undertaken to analyse their health impact, and fewer still to analyse the impact of variables other than particulate matter. The objective of this study is to analyse the short-term impact of NO2, PM10, PM2.5, O3 and temperature in heat waves on emergency hospital admissions in Spain on days when biomass combustion occurs. We conducted an ecological longitudinal time series study across the period 2013-2018. The dependent variables were emergency hospital admissions due to all causes (ICD-10: A00-R99), circulatory causes (ICD-10: I00-I99) and respiratory causes (ICD-10: J00-J99) in 9 representative Spanish provinces. The independent variables were daily mean air pollution concentrations measured at a provincial level. We also included daily maximum temperatures recorded at reference observatories in the respective provinces. Poisson generalised linear models were fitted for days with and without PM advections due to biomass burning smoke. We controlled for trends, seasonalities, the autoregressive nature of the series, Sundays and Public Holidays. Days with biomass burning smoke advections increased PM concentrations in all provinces and ozone in many of them, something that did not occur in equal measure in the case of NO2. Nevertheless, the principal impact on admissions was due to O3, followed by NO2, PM, and lastly, heat-wave temperatures. This pattern was observed for all three causes analysed. The role of PM was relegated to that of a third factor, and the role of temperature to an order of lesser magnitude than that of chemical pollution. To focus the health impacts of wildfires exclusively on the impact of PM concentrations would be to minimise their real impact on population health. It is therefore essential to implement integrated plans that take into account the joint effect of all atmospheric variables affected.
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