An exposure appraisal of outdoor air pollution on the respiratory well-being of a developing city population
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Date
Authors
Aliyu, Yahaya A.
Botai, Joel Ongego
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Zaria is the educational hub of northern Nigeria. It is a developing city with a pollution level high enough to be ranked amongst
the World Health Organization’s (WHO) most polluted cities. The study appraised the influence of outdoor air pollution on
the respiratory well-being of a population in a limited resource environment. With the approved ethics, the techniques utilized
were: portable pollutant monitors, respiratory health records, WHO AirQ+ software, and the American Thoracic Society (ATS)
questionnaire. They were utilized to acquire day-time weighted outdoor pollution levels, health respiratory cases, assumed
baseline incidence (BI), and exposure respiratory symptoms among selected study participants respectively. The study revealed
an average respiratory illness incidence rate of 607 per 100,000 cases. Findings showed that an average of 2648 cases could have
been avoided if the theoretical WHO threshold limit for the particulate matter with diameter of <2.5/10 micron (PM2.5/PM10)
were adhered to. Using the questionnaire survey, phlegm was identified as the predominant respiratory symptom. A regression
analysis showed that the criteria pollutant PM2.5, was the most predominant cause of respiratory symptoms among interviewed
respondents. The study logistics revealed that outdoor pollution is significantly associated with respiratory well-being of the
study population in Zaria, Nigeria.
Description
Keywords
Air pollution, Respiratory health, Zaria
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Aliyu, Y.A. & Botai, J.O. 2018, 'An exposure appraisal of outdoor air pollution on the respiratory well-being of a developing city population', Journal of Epidemiology and Global Health, 8, no. 1-2, pp. 91-100.
