Outdoor nitrogen dioxide exposure and longitudinal health status trajectory in the Canadian National Population Health Survey

Abstract Few studies have examined the association between air pollution and the trajectory of global health status measures related to the functional impacts of chronic disease. To address this gap, we examined the trajectory of the Health Utilities Index (HUI) over 17 years of follow-up among Cana...

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Main Authors: David M. Stieb, Li Chen, Perry Hystad, Robyn Rittmaster, Eric Lavigne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2024-12-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-79288-0
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author David M. Stieb
Li Chen
Perry Hystad
Robyn Rittmaster
Eric Lavigne
author_facet David M. Stieb
Li Chen
Perry Hystad
Robyn Rittmaster
Eric Lavigne
author_sort David M. Stieb
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Few studies have examined the association between air pollution and the trajectory of global health status measures related to the functional impacts of chronic disease. To address this gap, we examined the trajectory of the Health Utilities Index (HUI) over 17 years of follow-up among Canadian National Population Health Survey (NPHS) participants. Annual average nitrogen dioxide (NO2) exposures from a national land use regression surface were mapped to 15,631 NPHS participants at their place of residence provided at each follow-up. We modelled HUI trajectory as a cubic polynomial function of age in relation to air pollution and selected covariates using random growth curve models to account for longitudinal repeated measures. Adjusting for covariates selected based on a directed acyclic graph, we found that NO2 exposure exhibited a significant negative association with HUI in females. It also exhibited a significant positive interaction with the linear age term, and a significant negative interaction with the quadratic age term, resulting in a small non-significant decrease in quality adjusted life years lived after age 20 among females. Our analysis provides a proof of concept for examining the influence of built environment variables on the trajectory of health related quality of life in Canada.
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spelling doaj-art-e0b78c7b255e4e36b7be2464f48693e42025-08-20T02:39:37ZengNature PortfolioScientific Reports2045-23222024-12-011411910.1038/s41598-024-79288-0Outdoor nitrogen dioxide exposure and longitudinal health status trajectory in the Canadian National Population Health SurveyDavid M. Stieb0Li Chen1Perry Hystad2Robyn Rittmaster3Eric Lavigne4Environmental Health Science and Research Bureau, Health Canada, Vancouver, BC, CanadaEnvironmental Health Science and Research Bureau, Health Canada, Vancouver, BC, CanadaCollege of Public Health and Human Sciences, Oregon State UniversityRisk Management Bureau, Health CanadaEnvironmental Health Science and Research Bureau, Health Canada, Vancouver, BC, CanadaAbstract Few studies have examined the association between air pollution and the trajectory of global health status measures related to the functional impacts of chronic disease. To address this gap, we examined the trajectory of the Health Utilities Index (HUI) over 17 years of follow-up among Canadian National Population Health Survey (NPHS) participants. Annual average nitrogen dioxide (NO2) exposures from a national land use regression surface were mapped to 15,631 NPHS participants at their place of residence provided at each follow-up. We modelled HUI trajectory as a cubic polynomial function of age in relation to air pollution and selected covariates using random growth curve models to account for longitudinal repeated measures. Adjusting for covariates selected based on a directed acyclic graph, we found that NO2 exposure exhibited a significant negative association with HUI in females. It also exhibited a significant positive interaction with the linear age term, and a significant negative interaction with the quadratic age term, resulting in a small non-significant decrease in quality adjusted life years lived after age 20 among females. Our analysis provides a proof of concept for examining the influence of built environment variables on the trajectory of health related quality of life in Canada.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-79288-0
spellingShingle David M. Stieb
Li Chen
Perry Hystad
Robyn Rittmaster
Eric Lavigne
Outdoor nitrogen dioxide exposure and longitudinal health status trajectory in the Canadian National Population Health Survey
Scientific Reports
title Outdoor nitrogen dioxide exposure and longitudinal health status trajectory in the Canadian National Population Health Survey
title_full Outdoor nitrogen dioxide exposure and longitudinal health status trajectory in the Canadian National Population Health Survey
title_fullStr Outdoor nitrogen dioxide exposure and longitudinal health status trajectory in the Canadian National Population Health Survey
title_full_unstemmed Outdoor nitrogen dioxide exposure and longitudinal health status trajectory in the Canadian National Population Health Survey
title_short Outdoor nitrogen dioxide exposure and longitudinal health status trajectory in the Canadian National Population Health Survey
title_sort outdoor nitrogen dioxide exposure and longitudinal health status trajectory in the canadian national population health survey
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-79288-0
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