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Spatially-structured human mortality modelling using air pollutants with a compositional approach.

Joseph Sánchez-Balseca1, Agustí Pérez-Foguet1

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This summary is machine-generated.

This study models human mortality using air pollution data as a composition. The compositional approach, considering air pollutants

Keywords:
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Area of Science:

  • Environmental Epidemiology
  • Biostatistics
  • Demography

Background:

  • Demographic models traditionally use time-based data.
  • Environmental factors, such as air pollution, significantly impact human mortality.
  • Existing models may not fully capture the complex interplay between air quality and health outcomes.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To evaluate the association between human mortality and air pollutant levels using a compositional statistical approach.
  • To develop and validate a spatially-structured model incorporating air pollution as a compositional covariate.
  • To assess the model's performance in predicting mortality based on air quality data.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized a spatially-structured demographic model incorporating air pollution data.
  • Treated air pollutant levels as a composition, accounting for their relative proportions.
  • Analyzed human mortality data, disaggregated by sex and age-group, across 48 Spanish counties.
  • Employed a likelihood ratio test to compare the proposed model with a time-only model.

Main Results:

  • The proposed compositional model demonstrated a better fit to observed human mortality data compared to time-based models.
  • The spatially-structured approach effectively captured spatial heterogeneity in air pollutant concentrations.
  • The model achieved adequate quality indexes for the evaluated Spanish counties.
  • The model shows potential for short-term mortality predictions under various air pollution scenarios.

Conclusions:

  • Air pollution, when treated as a composition, is a valuable covariate in human mortality models.
  • Spatially-structured compositional models offer improved accuracy in reflecting local environmental conditions and their impact on mortality.
  • The developed methodology provides a robust framework for understanding and predicting mortality influenced by air quality.