84 results on '"Ennio Cadum"'
Search Results
2. [Effects on mortality and morbidity among the population living close to the Valmadrera (Lombardy Region, Northern Italy) incinerator]
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Cristiano, Piccinelli, Paolo, Carnà, Emanuele, Amodio, Ennio, Cadum, Francesco, Donato, Magda, Rognoni, Marco, Vuono, and Luca, Cavalieri d'Oro
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Cohort Studies ,Male ,Air Pollutants ,Italy ,Pregnancy ,Neoplasms ,Humans ,Environmental Pollutants ,Female ,Environmental Exposure ,Incineration ,Morbidity - Abstract
assessment of the health effects on the resident population around the incinerator for municipal solid waste in Valmadrera (Lombardy Region, Northern Italy) in relation to the exposure level to the pollutants produced by the plant.historical cohort study, based on the resident population from 2003 to 2016 in the study area. With a dispersion model, based on PM10 emitted by the plant, three areas of exposure (high, medium, low) were defined and, on the basis of the residence of the cohort, different exposure levels were attributed to the subjects. The association between level of exposure and health effects were estimated by comparing the high and medium exposure levels with the low exposure level, using a Cox model, adjusted for age and socioeconomic deprivation index.mortality rates, hospitalization rates, cancer incidence rates, and perinatal outcomes were analysed for the main causes potentially associated with exposure to incineration plants.the subjects enrolled in the cohort were 106,056 (1,000,242 person-years). There were no statistically significant excesses of risk for almost all the outcomes investigated. Excessive mortality and hospitalization were found for liver/biliary cancers (HR women: 2.57; 95%CI 1.15-2.79; HR men: 2.22; 95%CI 1.10-4, 84). In the municipality where the plant is located, an excess prevalence (OR 1.78; 95%CI 1.43-2.21) of hepatitis C was found.the results suggest the absence of a relationship between residence in areas with different levels of pollutants emitted by the plant and the onset of almost all diseases. The associated causes do not have aetiological plausibility with exposure to pollutants from waste incineration. In particular, for liver/liver and biliary cancer, the association with infectious causes rather than exposure to environmental pollutants is more plausible.
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- 2022
3. Health impact assessment should be based on correct methods
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Carla, Ancona, Giorgio, Assennato, Fabrizio, Bianchi, Annibale, Biggeri, Ennio, Cadum, Dario, Consonni, Francesco, Forastiere, and Andrea, Ranzi
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Humans ,Health Impact Assessment - Abstract
The methodology of health impact assessment (HIA), originally proposed by WHO, is widely used to predict the potential health effects in a community living in a place in which a new project (e.g., an industrial plant) will be implemented. One of the key quantities to calculate the impact (i.e., the number of attributable cases) is the baseline (i.e., before the project implementation) rate of selected diseases in the community. In a recent paper on this journal, this methodology has been challenged. Specifically, the use of baseline rate has been questioned, proposing to use only the fraction of the baseline rate due to the exposures related to the project, and not the rate due to all risk factors for the disease. In this commentary, we argue that the proposal is logically and epidemiologically unsound, and devoid of scientific motivation. The conclusion that the traditional approach overestimates the health impact should be rejected as based on flawed assumptions. On the contrary, the proposal may produce a (seriously biased) underestimation of attributable cases.
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- 2022
4. Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Total and Cause-Specific Mortality in Pavia, Northern Italy
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Pietro Perotti, Paola Bertuccio, Stefano Cacitti, Silvia Deandrea, Lorenza Boschetti, Simona Dalle Carbonare, Stefano Marguati, Simona Migliazza, Eleonora Porzio, Simona Riboli, Ennio Cadum, Lorella Cecconami, and Anna Odone
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Male ,Italy ,Cause of Death ,Neoplasms ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Female ,mortality ,cause of death ,pandemic ,Mortality ,Pandemics - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic had an unfavorable impact on overall mortality in Italy, with the strongest consequences in northern Italy. Scant data are available on cause-specific mortality. This study aims at investigating the impact of the pandemic on the overall and cause-specific mortality in one province in northern Italy, Pavia. We linked individual-level administrative data (i.e., death certification and population data) from the Health Protection Agency (HPA) in Pavia province between 2015 and 2020. We computed age-standardized mortality rates (Italian population 2011) by cause, sex, and calendar year, and computed the rate ratio and the corresponding 95% confidence intervals to compare rates in 2020 versus 2015–2019. The 2020 excess total mortality in Pavia was 24% in men and 25% in women, reaching rates of 1272.6/100,000 and 1304.4/100,000, respectively. Significant excesses were found for infectious and parasitic diseases, excluding COVID-19 (about +30% in both sexes); respiratory system diseases (44% in men; 30% in women); and dementia and Alzheimer’s disease among men (24%). Reductions were reported for neoplasms (−14% in men); cerebrovascular diseases (−25% in men); and ischemic diseases (−13% in women), but also for transport accidents in men. COVID-19 was the third cause of death in both sexes with rates of 274.9/100,000 men (859 total deaths) and 213.9/100,000 women (758 total deaths). Excess mortality in Pavia was higher than Italy but lower than Lombardy. Increases in mortality from causes related to infectious and respiratory diseases can likely be explained by underdiagnosed deaths from COVID-19.
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- 2022
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5. Mapping air pollutants at municipality level in Italy and Spain in support to health impact evaluations
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Gaia Righini, Antonio Piersanti, José María Baldasano, Stefano Bande, Ennio Cadum, Mihaela Mircea, Stefania Ghigo, Xavier Basagaña, and Luisella Ciancarella
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Pollution ,Atmospheric Science ,medicine.medical_specialty ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Health impact ,Air pollution ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,medicine.disease_cause ,01 natural sciences ,Kriging ,Environmental protection ,medicine ,Air quality index ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,business.industry ,Public health ,Environmental resource management ,Scale (social sciences) ,Environmental science ,business ,Health impact assessment - Abstract
A growing health concern, due to poor air quality, recently led to an increased number of studies regarding air pollution effects on public health. Consequently, close attention is paid to estimation methods of exposure to atmospheric pollutants. This paper aims to meet a specific requirement of epidemiological researchers, that is providing annual air pollution maps at municipality scale for health impact assessment purposes on national basis. Firstly, data fusion through kriging with external drift is implemented, combining pollution data from two different sources, models and measurements, in order to improve the spatial distribution of surface concentrations at grid level. Then, the assimilated data of air pollution are upscaled, so as to obtain concentrations at municipality level. This methodology was applied to Italy and Spain (in Spain, only the second step was carried out since the modeled concentration already included an assimilation procedure). In both countries, for each municipality, an estimate of the concentration value for atmospheric pollutants of major concern for human health (PM10 and NO2) was provided, offering more relevant information from a surveillance point of view.
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- 2017
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6. Mortality study of employees at a chemical manufacturing plant using administrative databases
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Ennio Cadum, Antonella Bena, Elena Farina, and Moreno Demaria
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Database ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,computer.software_genre ,030210 environmental & occupational health ,Occupational safety and health ,Confidence interval ,Social insurance ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cohort ,Risk of mortality ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,computer ,Record linkage ,Cohort study ,Cause of death - Abstract
Background This study investigated mortality in a cohort of 1,988 male workers at a chemical manufacturing plant (1981–2011) and evaluated the quality of the results obtained using administrative databases. Methods Information about the workers was obtained from the archives of the Italian National Institute for Social Insurance. Vital status and causes of death were ascertained through record linkage with electronic archives and follow-up mailing. Regional reference rates were used to calculate standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) and 90% confidence intervals (CI). Results The analysis showed increased SMR for selected cancers of a priori interest: respiratory system (SMR: 126.8; 90%CI: 105–152), pleura (330.5; 90%CI 164–596), and non-Hodgkin lymphoma (196.1; 90%CI 102–342). Conclusions The results indicate an effect of hazardous exposures among workers in this chemical manufacturing plant. Using administrative databases to construct historical cohorts is an efficient method in time and resources, for estimating the risk of mortality and generating hypotheses. Am. J. Ind. Med. 9999:XX–XX, © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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- 2016
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7. Human biomonitoring health surveillance for metals near a waste-to-energy incinerator: The 1-year post-operam study
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Beatrice Bocca, Flavia Ruggieri, Elena Farina, Ennio Cadum, Martina Gandini, Manuela Orengia, Anna Pino, Giuseppe Salamina, Antonella Bena, Enrico Procopio, and Alessandro Alimonti
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Adult ,Chromium ,Environmental Engineering ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,0208 environmental biotechnology ,Population ,02 engineering and technology ,Incineration ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Tobacco smoke ,Mass Spectrometry ,Health based guidance values (HBGVs) ,Cohort Studies ,Young Adult ,Waste-to-energy (WTE) incinerator ,Environmental health ,Biomonitoring ,Environmental Chemistry ,Humans ,Recycling ,Exposure assessment ,Follow-up human biomonitoring (HBM) ,Metals ,Environmental Exposure ,Environmental Monitoring ,Health Impact Assessment ,Italy ,education ,Air quality index ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,education.field_of_study ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,Environmental exposure ,Pollution ,020801 environmental engineering ,Waste-to-energy ,Environmental science - Abstract
This human biomonitoring (HBM) follow-up survey, within the SPoTT project, assessed the temporal and spatial trends of exposure to 18 metals in a cohort living around the waste-to-energy (WTE) incinerator of Turin (Italy) before (T0, 2013) and after 1-year of plant activity (T1, 2014). Urine of 380 adult individuals (186 exposed and 194 unexposed subjects, classified on fallout maps) were analyzed by sector field inductively coupled mass spectrometry. A decrease trend of the majority of metals in all subjects indicates that the overall air quality of the studied sites was not significantly compromised, also in proximity of the WTE plant, as corroborated also by air monitoring data of the regional agency. The only relevant exception was the higher Cr levels found at T1 than T0 in exposed subjects, suggesting a possible contribution from the WTE plant. Chromium, Mn and Pt urine levels were also higher in the site far from the WTE, in relation to other sources as vehicular traffic, industrial and civil activities. Whilst, As and Cd were influenced by fish intake and tobacco smoke. A very small number of individuals at T1, equally distributed in both areas, exceeded the health-based guidance values and so, at current knowledge, living near the Turin incineration did not significantly influence the exposure status of the population.
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- 2018
8. Road Traffic Noise: Mortality and Incidence of Cardiovascular Events in an Italian Population-Based Large Cohort
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Gaetano Licitra, Massimo Stafoggia, Francesco Forastiere, Ennio Cadum, Francesca Mattei, Chiara Badaloni, Moreno De Maria, Carla Ancona, Giulia Cesaroni, and Jacopo Fogola
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Noise ,Environmental health ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Air pollution ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Environmental science ,medicine.disease_cause ,human activities ,Road traffic ,Italian population ,General Environmental Science ,Large cohort - Abstract
Background/Aim: Road traffic is highly prevalent in Europe and it is a source of both noise and air pollution. Our aim was to study whether long-term exposures to road traffic noise are associated ...
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- 2018
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9. Air pollution and multiple acute respiratory outcomes
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Corrado Scarnato, Ennio Cadum, Giovanna Berti, Francesco Forastiere, Annunziata Faustini, Massimo Stafoggia, Luigi Bisanti, Achille Cernigliaro, Sandra Mallone, and Paola Colais
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Copd patients ,Air pollution ,Pulmonary disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,Air Pollution ,Humans ,Medicine ,Cities ,Respiratory system ,Respiratory Tract Infections ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Air Pollutants ,COPD ,Cross-Over Studies ,Respiratory tract infections ,business.industry ,Environmental Exposure ,Middle Aged ,Respiration Disorders ,medicine.disease ,Crossover study ,respiratory tract diseases ,Hospitalization ,Italy ,Female ,Particulate Matter ,Ischaemic heart disease ,business - Abstract
Short-term effects of air pollutants on respiratory mortality and morbidity have been consistently reported but usually studied separately. To more completely assess air pollution effects, we studied hospitalisations for respiratory diseases together with out-of-hospital respiratory deaths. A time-stratified case-crossover study was carried out in six Italian cities from 2001 to 2005. Daily particulate matter (particles with a 50% cut-off aerodynamic diameter of 10 μm (PM10)) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) associations with hospitalisations for respiratory diseases (n = 100 690), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) (n = 38 577), lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) among COPD patients (n = 9886) and out-of-hospital respiratory deaths (n = 5490) were estimated for residents aged ≥35 years. For an increase of 10 μg·m(-3) in PM10, we found an immediate 0.59% (lag 0-1 days) increase in hospitalisations for respiratory diseases and a 0.67% increase for COPD; the 1.91% increase in LRTI hospitalisations lasted longer (lag 0-3 days) and the 3.95% increase in respiratory mortality lasted 6 days. Effects of NO2 were stronger and lasted longer (lag 0-5 days). Age, sex and previous ischaemic heart disease acted as effect modifiers for different outcomes. Analysing multiple rather than single respiratory events shows stronger air pollution effects. The temporal relationship between the pollutant increases and hospitalisations or mortality for respiratory diseases differs.
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- 2013
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10. [Population health surveillance of the general population living near Turin (Northern Italy) incinerator (SPoTT): methodology of the study]
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Antonella, Bena, Monica, Chiusolo, Manuela, Orengia, Ennio, Cadum, Elena, Farina, Loredana, Musmeci, Enrico, Procopio, Giuseppe, Salamina, and Marco, Fontana
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Adult ,Male ,Population Health ,Respiratory Tract Diseases ,Incineration ,Middle Aged ,Solid Waste ,Italy ,Lead ,Waste Management ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Metals, Heavy ,Population Surveillance ,Humans ,Female ,Particulate Matter ,Longitudinal Studies ,Aged ,Follow-Up Studies ,Power Plants - Abstract
Si intende qui descrivere il sistema di sorveglianza sugli effetti sulla salute (SpoTT) dell'inquinamento ambientale nelle aree circostanti l'inceneritore di Torino. SPoTT ha 3 linee di attività: 1. monitoraggio epidemiologico degli effetti a breve termine attraverso analisi temporali e misura della correlazione tra livelli giornalieri di emissioni dell'impianto e andamento degli eventi individuati dagli archivi dei dimessi (SDO), di pronto soccorso e di mortalità; sono coinvolti coloro che nel 2013-2018 risiedevano nell'area di ricaduta delle emissioni; 2. sorveglianza epidemiologica degli effetti a lungo termine, stimando tassi standardizzati di mortalità e morbosità; a ogni soggetto è attribuito il valore stimato di esposizione cumulato nel tempo caratteristico della residenza anagrafica; le informazioni sulla salute sono reperite dagli archivi SDO, di mortalità e dai certificati di assistenza al parto; sono studiati due decenni pre-post l'avvio dell'impianto: 2003-2012 e 2013-2022; 3. monitoraggio biologico con misurazione pre-post di metalli, PCDD/F, PCB, OH-IPA; sono coinvolti 196 residenti esposti e 196 di controllo di 35-69 anni, campionati a caso dalle anagrafi comunali; sono effettuate misure di funzionalità endocrina e respiratoria, pressione arteriosa, rischio cardiovascolare; l'esposizione cumulativa sarà stimata per ciascuna persona campionata integrando l'indirizzo di residenza, il tempo di permanenza in ciascun indirizzo e i dati ricavati dai modelli di ricaduta; sarà costituita una biobanca per future indagini di laboratorio; sono coinvolti anche 20 allevatori e i lavoratori dell'impianto. Una quarta linea di attività, non descritta in questo articolo, riguarda il monitoraggio della salute dei lavoratori addetti all'impianto. SPoTT è il primo studio in Italia su inceneritori e salute che adotta un disegno di studio longitudinale di adeguata potenza sia per i residenti sia per i lavoratori. I primi risultati sono attesi nel corso del 2016.
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- 2016
11. Biomonitoring and exposure assessment of people living near or working at an Italian waste incinerator: methodology of the SPoTT study
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Monica Chiusolo, Elena De Felip, Antonella Bena, Enrico Procopio, Alessandro Alimonti, Martina Gandini, Anna Pino, Manuela Orengia, Giuseppe Salamina, Beatrice Bocca, Ennio Cadum, Elena Farina, and Anna Laura Iamiceli
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Adult ,Male ,Pollution ,Engineering ,Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Incineration ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,01 natural sciences ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Environmental health ,Biomonitoring ,Humans ,Respiratory function ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons ,education ,Aged ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,media_common ,Exposure assessment ,education.field_of_study ,Waste management ,business.industry ,Environmental Exposure ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Polychlorinated Biphenyls ,Italy ,Metals ,Health effect ,Cohort ,Female ,business ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Only few studies on the health effect of waste incinerators were focused on human biomonitoring (HBM). Our aim is to describe a protocol for assessing early variation of selected items in a population group living close to a waste incinerator in Turin, Italy. A cohort of 394 subjects was randomly selected, among residents near the incinerator and residents far from it. To achieve this sample size, 765 subjects were contacted. The cohort was monitored before the start-up of the plant and will be followed up 1 and 3 years after, with measurements of respiratory function, selected blood and urine parameters including 19 metals, 17 congeners of PCDDs/Fs, 12 congeners of DL-PCBs, 30 congeners of NDL-PCBs, 11 OH-PAHs, specific hormones (T3, T4, TSH, cortisol and ACTH) and common health parameters. The same protocol is applied for plant workers and breeders living near the plant. Individual exposure to urban pollution and waste incinerator fallout were assessed through the use of mathematical models. Information on individual habits was assessed using a specific questionnaire. SPoTT is the first Italian study that adopts a longitudinal design of appropriate statistical power to assess health impacts of waste incinerator plants' emission. The initial results comparing the baseline to the first follow-up are due at the end of 2016.
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- 2016
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12. Air quality near industrial facilities in Italy: socioeconomic differential in exposure and impact
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Carla Ancona, Francesco Forastiere, Luisella Ciancarella, Annunziata Faustini, Ennio Cadum, Chiara Badaloni, M Demaria, Marina Davoli, and Martina Nicole Golini
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Environmental health ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Environmental science ,Differential (mechanical device) ,Air quality index ,Socioeconomic status ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2016
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13. Risk perception of people involved in biomonitoring of the general population living near an Italian incinerator
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Manuela Orengia, Maria Rowinski, Martina Gandini, Ennio Cadum, Antonella Bena, Giuseppe Salamina, and Enrico Procopio
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Risk perception ,education.field_of_study ,Geography ,Environmental health ,Biomonitoring ,Population ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,education ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2016
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14. Long term effects of air pollution on hospital admissions. Results from the Italian cohort in the LIFE MED HISS project. (LIFE12 ENV/IT/000834)
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Maria Rowinski, M Demaria, Gaia Righini, Giovanna Berti, Paolo Carnà, Stefania Ghigo, Teresa Spadea, Martina Gandini, Giuseppe Costa, Cecilia Scarinzi, Gabriele Zanini, Stefano Bande, and Ennio Cadum
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Hiss ,business.industry ,Environmental health ,Cohort ,Air pollution ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease_cause ,General Environmental Science ,Term (time) - Published
- 2016
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15. Mortality study in the nine Italian municipalities hosting civil nuclear plants
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G. Venoso, Ennio Cadum, Carmela Carpentieri, Francesco Bochicchio, Francesco Forastiere, Chiara Badaloni, and S. Antignani
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Geography ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Nuclear plant ,Socioeconomics ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2016
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16. Long term effects of air pollution in Turin, Northern Italy. A population-based cohort study
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Rocco Pispico, Claudia Galassi, Nicolás Zengarini, M Demaria, Martina Gandini, Barbara Lorusso, and Ennio Cadum
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Population based cohort ,Geography ,Environmental health ,Air pollution ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,medicine.disease_cause ,General Environmental Science ,Term (time) ,Northern italy - Published
- 2016
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17. Long term effects of air pollution on mortality. Results from the Italian cohort in the LIFE MED HISS project (LIFE12ENV/IT/000834)
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Stefano Bande, Ennio Cadum, Paolo Carnà, Luisella Ciancarella, Antonio Piersanti, Cecilia Scarinzi, Giuseppe Costa, Moreno Demaria, Teresa Spadea, Martina Gandini, and Giovanna Berti
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Hiss ,business.industry ,Environmental health ,Cohort ,Air pollution ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,medicine.disease_cause ,business ,General Environmental Science ,Term (time) - Published
- 2016
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18. Follow-up study in a population cohort resident near a urban incinerator First results of the SPoTT surveillance program on metal levels in urine
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Giuseppe Salamina, Anna Pino, Manuela Orengia, Beatrice Bocca, Alessandro Alimonti, Ennio Cadum, Enrico Procopio, Antonella Bena, Elena Farina, Monica Chiusolo, Martina Gandini, and Maria Rowinski
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business.industry ,Environmental health ,Health impact ,Biomonitoring ,Follow up studies ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Medicine ,Urine ,Population cohort ,business ,General Environmental Science ,Incineration - Abstract
Introduction Health impact of waste incinerators are controversial, as well as the human biomonitoring (HBM) results on people living nearby are still inconclusive Objective of this follow-up inves...
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- 2016
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19. LIFE MED HISS – LIFE12 ENV/IT/000834: an 'health surveillance' pilot project on long term effects exposure to air pollution to implement a European system
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Luisella Ciancarella, Isabella Annesi-Maesano, Giovanna Berti, Maria Rowinski, Peter Otorepec, Xavier Basagaña, Giuseppe Costa, Teresa Spadea, Gabriele Zanini, and Ennio Cadum
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Health surveillance ,Hiss ,business.industry ,Environmental health ,Air pollution ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,medicine.disease_cause ,business ,General Environmental Science ,Term (time) - Published
- 2016
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20. Metal levels in urine samples and in air particulate matter in Turin metropolitan area (Italy): a comparison study
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Antonella Bena, Monica Chiusolo, Francesco Lollobrigida, Beatrice Bocca, Manuela Orengia, Ennio Cadum, Martina Gandini, Giuseppe Salamina, Elena Farina, Maria Rowinski, Anna Pino, and Enrico Procopio
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Environmental chemistry ,Comparison study ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Environmental science ,Urine ,Particulates ,Metropolitan area ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2016
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21. Urban/rural differences in ecological studies linking mortality and air pollution (LIFE MED HISS LIFE12 ENV/IT/000834)
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Stefania Ghigo, Stefano Bande, Ennio Cadum, José María Baldasano, Jose Barrera-Gómez, Èrica Martínez-Solanas, David Agis, Xavier Basagaña, Joan Benach, and Gustavo Arévalo
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Hiss ,Geography ,Environmental health ,Air pollution ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,medicine.disease_cause ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2016
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22. Pollutant data mapping at municipality level within the European Project LIFE MED HISS – LIFE12 ENV/IT/000834
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Stefania Ghigo, Giovanna Berti, Mihaela Mircea, David Agis, Xavier Basagaña, Martina Gandini, Gaia Righini, Gabriele Zanini, Antonio Piersanti, Stefano Bande, Ennio Cadum, and Luisella Ciancarella
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Pollutant ,Hiss ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Environmental science ,business ,General Environmental Science ,Data mapping - Published
- 2016
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23. Association between PM10 and mortality at municipalities’ level in Slovenia: ecological spatial study (LIFE MED HISS LIFE12 ENV/IT/000834)
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Andreja Kukec, Ennio Cadum, Xavier Basagaña, Simona Perčič, Ivan Erzen, Lijana Zaletel-Kragelj, and Peter Otorepec
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Hiss ,Geography ,nervous system ,Ecology ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,macromolecular substances ,Association (psychology) ,humanities ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Introduction Several ecological spatial studies have demonstrated an association between high outdoor PM10 levels and mortality. In Slovenia, several polluted areas exist, with specific geographica...
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- 2016
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24. Susceptibility factors and long term effects of air pollution: mortality among 3 sub-cohorts of the Italian Longitudinal Study. Results of the LIFE MED HISS project (LIFE12 ENV/IT/000834)
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Gaia Righini, Antonio Piersanti, Giuseppe Costa, M Demaria, Cecilia Scarinzi, Stefania Ghigo, Giovanna Berti, Martina Gandini, Teresa Spadea, Stefano Bande, Ennio Cadum, and Paolo Carnà
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Hiss ,Longitudinal study ,business.industry ,Environmental health ,Air pollution ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,medicine.disease_cause ,business ,General Environmental Science ,Term (time) - Abstract
Introduction There are few studies assessing the role played by susceptibility factors on mortality related to long term exposure to air pollution. The objective of this study is to estimate the ri...
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- 2016
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25. Mortality study of employees at a chemical manufacturing plant using administrative databases
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Antonella, Bena, Elena, Farina, Moreno, Demaria, and Ennio, Cadum
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Adult ,Male ,Databases, Factual ,Middle Aged ,Hazardous Substances ,Cohort Studies ,Occupational Diseases ,Young Adult ,Italy ,Manufacturing and Industrial Facilities ,Risk Factors ,Cause of Death ,Chemical Industry ,Neoplasms ,Occupational Exposure ,Chronic Disease ,Humans ,Registries ,Aged - Abstract
This study investigated mortality in a cohort of 1,988 male workers at a chemical manufacturing plant (1981-2011) and evaluated the quality of the results obtained using administrative databases.Information about the workers was obtained from the archives of the Italian National Institute for Social Insurance. Vital status and causes of death were ascertained through record linkage with electronic archives and follow-up mailing. Regional reference rates were used to calculate standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) and 90% confidence intervals (CI).The analysis showed increased SMR for selected cancers of a priori interest: respiratory system (SMR: 126.8; 90%CI: 105-152), pleura (330.5; 90%CI 164-596), and non-Hodgkin lymphoma (196.1; 90%CI 102-342).The results indicate an effect of hazardous exposures among workers in this chemical manufacturing plant. Using administrative databases to construct historical cohorts is an efficient method in time and resources, for estimating the risk of mortality and generating hypotheses. Am. J. Ind. Med. 59:866-876, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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- 2016
26. Human biomonitoring of metals in adults living near a waste-to-energy incinerator in ante-operam phase: Focus on reference values and health-based assessments
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Manuela Orengia, Anna Pino, Loredana Musmeci, Alessandro Alimonti, Jenny D’Aversa, Beatrice Bocca, Monica Chiusolo, Antonella Bena, Giuseppe Salamina, Ennio Cadum, Enrico Procopio, Elena Farina, and Martina Gandini
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Adult ,Male ,Reference values (RVs) ,Population ,Conservation of Energy Resources ,Urine ,Incineration ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Risk Assessment ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reference Values ,Waste-to-energy (WTE) incinerator ,Biomonitoring ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,Human biomonitoring (HBM) ,Aged ,education.field_of_study ,Chemistry ,Smoking ,Bottled water ,Middle Aged ,Waste-to-energy ,Italy ,Metals ,Environmental chemistry ,Reference values ,Environmental Pollutants ,Female ,Risk assessment ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The human biomonitoring (HBM) of metals is a part of the ongoing project SPoTT for the longitudinal health surveillance of the population living near a waste-to-energy (WTE) incinerator (Turin, Italy). The HBM of metals in the SPoTT population aimed to evaluate: i) reference values (RVs) before the WTE incinerator started operation; ii) differences in exposure by variables; iii) variations respect to other HBM studies; iv) exposure that exceeds the available health-based benchmarks as the Biomonitoring Equivalents (BEs) for urine Cd and Human Biomonitoring (HBM-I and HBM-II) values for urine Hg, Tl, and blood Pb; v) risk assessment by generating hazard quotients (HQs) for the single metal and hazard index (HI) for the co-occurrence of metals. Eighteen metals in urine and Pb in blood were determined by sector field inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Metal concentrations were comparable with RVs reported in other countries, except for slightly higher As, Be, Ir, Pd, Pt, Rh, and Tl levels. Smoking was associated with Cd; age with Pb; drinking bottled water with As and Cd; consumption of fish with As and Hg; amalgams with Hg and Sn; dental restorations with Pd and Pt; use of jewelry with Co and Rh, and piercing with Ni. While HQs for urine Cd, Hg, Tl and blood Pb suggested that adverse effects were unlikely, the HQ value raised the question of whether additive interactions of these metals could produce health concern. The obtained HBM data can be an early warning for accumulations of metals and identification of subgroups at risk.
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- 2016
27. Exposure modifiers of the relationships of transportation noise with high blood pressure and noise annoyance
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Konstantina Dimakopoulou, Elli Davou, Wolfgang Babisch, Danny Houthuijs, Gösta Bluhm, Panayota Sourtzi, Anna Hansell, Jenny Selander, Göran Pershagen, Ennio Cadum, Sarah Floud, Klea Katsouyanni, Wim Swart, Alexandros S. Haralabidis, and Federica Vigna-Taglianti
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Male ,Aircraft ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Aircraft noise ,Blood Pressure ,Annoyance ,Absorption ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Risk Factors ,Statistics ,Odds Ratio ,Prevalence ,Noise control ,Humans ,Noise barrier ,Aged ,Construction Materials ,Noise pollution ,Linear model ,Regression analysis ,Environmental Exposure ,Middle Aged ,Irritable Mood ,Europe ,Noise ,Logistic Models ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Noise, Transportation ,Facility Design and Construction ,Hypertension ,Multivariate Analysis ,Auditory Perception ,Housing ,Linear Models ,Environmental science ,Female ,Automobiles ,human activities ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
In the cross-sectional hypertension and exposure to noise near airports study the relationship between road traffic noise, aircraft noise and hypertension and annoyance was investigated. The data collection comprised a variety of potentially exposure modifying factors, including type of housing, location of rooms, window opening habits, use of noise-reducing remedies, shielding due to obstacles, lengths of exposure. In the present paper the quantitative role of these factors on the relationship between road and aircraft noise exposure and outcomes was analyzed. Multiple logistic and linear regression models were calculated including these co-factors and related interaction terms with noise indicators, as well as stratified analyses. Type of housing, length of residence, location of rooms and the use of noise reducing remedies modified the relationship between noise and hypertension. However, the effects were not always in the direction of a stronger association in higher exposed subjects. Regarding annoyance, type of housing, location of rooms, noise barriers, window opening habits, noise insulation, the use of noise reducing remedies, hours spent at home during daytime were significant effect modifiers. The use of noise-reducing remedies turned out to be indicators of perceived noise disturbance rather than modifiers reducing the annoyance.
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- 2012
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28. Health Impact Assessment Of PM2.5 And NO2 In Italy. The Viias National Study
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Luisella Ciancarella, Martina Nicole Golini, Carla Ancona, Chiara Badaloni, Francesco Forastiere, Giulia Cesaroni, Ennio Cadum, and M Demaria
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Scenario based ,Energy strategy ,National study ,Air pollution ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Environmental science ,medicine.disease_cause ,Health impact assessment ,Environmental planning ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Objective: We estimated the avoidable impact of outdoor air pollution on mortality in Italy comparing a 2020 scenario based on the National Energy Strategy (NES) and a target scenario based on the ...
- Published
- 2015
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29. Vulnerability to Heat-Related Mortality
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Luigi Bisanti, Francesco Forastiere, Francesca de' Donato, Ennio Cadum, Paola Michelozzi, D Agostini, Antonio Russo, Sara De Lisio, Sally Picciotto, Annibale Biggeri, Paolo Pandolfi, Nicola Caranci, Moreno De Maria, Corrado Scarnato, Carlo A. Perucci, M Rognoni, Massimo Stafoggia, Rossella Miglio, M. Stafoggia, F. Forastiere, D. Agostini, A. Biggeri, L. Bisanti, E. Cadum, N. Caranci, F. de’Donato, S. De Lisio, M. De Maria, P. Michelozzi, R. Miglio, P. Pandolfi, S. Picciotto, M. Rognoni, A. Russo, C. Scarnato, and C. A. Perucci
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Adult ,Male ,Gerontology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urban Population ,Epidemiology ,Heat Stroke ,Population ,Poison control ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Aged ,Demography ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,Cross-Over Studies ,business.industry ,Case-control study ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,Confidence interval ,Apparent temperature ,Italy ,Social Class ,Population Surveillance ,Female ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although studies have documented increased mortality during heat waves, little information is available on the subgroups most susceptible to these effects. We evaluated the effects of summertime high temperature on daily mortality among population subgroups defined by demographic characteristics, socioeconomic status, and episodes of hospitalization for various conditions during the preceding 2 years. METHODS: We studied a total of 205,019 residents of 4 Italian cities (Bologna, Milan, Rome, and Turin) age 35 or older who died during 1997-2003. The case-crossover design was applied to evaluate the association between mean apparent temperature (same and previous day) and all-cause mortality. Pooled odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of dying at 30 degrees C (apparent temperature) relative to 20 degrees C were estimated accounting for time, population changes, and air pollution. RESULTS: We found an overall OR of 1.34 (CI = 1.27-1.42) at 30 degrees C relative to 20 degrees C. The odds ratio increased with age and was higher among women (OR = 1.45; 1.37-1.52) and among widows and widowers (1.50; 1.33-1.69). Low area-based income modestly increased the effect. Among the preexisting medical conditions investigated, effect modification was detected for previous psychiatric disorders (1.69; 1.39-2.07), depression (1.72; 1.24-2.39), heart conduction disorders (1.77; 1.38-2.27), and circulatory disorders of the brain (1.47; 1.34-1.62). Temperature-related mortality was higher among people residing in nursing homes, and a large effect was also detected for hospitalized subjects. CONCLUSIONS: Subsets of the population that are particularly vulnerable to high summer temperatures include the elderly, women, widows and widowers, those with selected medical conditions, and those staying in nursing homes and healthcare facilities. Language: en
- Published
- 2006
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30. Traffic air pollution and hospital admission for asthma: a case–control approach in a Turin (Italy) population
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Giuseppe Migliaretti, Franco Cavallo, Ennio Cadum, and Enrica Migliore
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Nitrogen Dioxide ,Population ,Air pollution ,Transportation ,Logistic regression ,medicine.disease_cause ,Risk Assessment ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Humans ,Nitrogen dioxide ,Particle Size ,Child ,education ,Aged ,Vehicle Emissions ,Asthma ,Inhalation Exposure ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Infant, Newborn ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Case-control study ,Infant ,Emergency department ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Surgery ,Hospitalization ,Italy ,chemistry ,Case-Control Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Epidemiological Monitoring ,Seasons ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,business ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Objectives: This study investigated the relationship between traffic air pollution and asthma, using a case–control design applied to routinely collected data. Methods: Subjects resident in Turin during the period 1997–1999 and admitted for asthma were defined as cases; patients admitted for causes other than respiratory diseases or heart diseases were defined as controls. Nitrogen dioxide and total suspended particulate were considered as indicators of traffic air pollution. Statistical analysis were performed, separately for young (0–14 years), adult (15–64 years) and elderly (>64 years) patients, with a logistic regression model; results are expressed as percentage of risk modification for a 10 g/m3 increase in exposure to pollutants. Results: The risk of emergency admissions for asthma rose significantly with increased exposure to nitrogen dioxide [2.4%, 95% Confidence Interval: 0.5%; 4.3%], and total suspended particulate [2.3%, 95% Confidence Interval: 1.1%–3.6%]. The significant association was evident, in particular, among young and elderly patients for both pollutants. Conclusion: Using a case–control design both easy to use and manage, the study confirms the significant association between hospital emergency admissions for asthma and exposure to nitrogen dioxide and total suspended particulate pollutants.
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- 2005
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31. [Health impact assessment of policies for municipal solid waste management: findings of the SESPIR Project]
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Andrea, Ranzi, Carla, Ancona, Paola, Angelini, Chiara, Badaloni, Achille, Cernigliaro, Monica, Chiusolo, Federica, Parmagnani, Renato, Pizzuti, Salvatore, Scondotto, Ennio, Cadum, Francesco, Forastiere, and Paolo, Lauriola
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Adult ,Male ,Urban Population ,Population Dynamics ,Incineration ,Risk Assessment ,Congenital Abnormalities ,Pregnancy ,Neoplasms ,Humans ,Recycling ,Health Policy ,Infant, Newborn ,Urban Health ,Environmental Exposure ,Infant, Low Birth Weight ,Models, Theoretical ,Respiration Disorders ,Refuse Disposal ,Government Programs ,Pregnancy Complications ,Waste Disposal Facilities ,Biodegradation, Environmental ,Italy ,Population Surveillance ,Environmental Pollutants ,Female ,Health Impact Assessment ,Quality-Adjusted Life Years ,Environmental Health - Abstract
The SESPIR Project (Epidemiological Surveillance of Health Status of Resident Population Around the Waste Treatment Plants) assessed the impact on health of residents nearby incinerators, landfills and mechanical biological treatment plants in five Italian regions (Emilia-Romagna, Piedmont, Lazio, Campania, and Sicily). The assessment procedure took into account the available knowledge on health effects of waste disposal facilities. Analyses were related to three different scenarios: a Baseline scenario, referred to plants active in 2008-2009; the regional future scenario, with plants expected in the waste regional plans; a virtuous scenario (Green 2020), based on a policy management of municipal solid waste (MSW) through the reduction of production and an intense recovery policy. Facing with a total population of around 24 million for the 5 regions, the residents nearby the plants were more than 380,000 people at Baseline. Such a population is reduced to approximately 330.000 inhabitants and 170.000 inhabitants in the regional and Green 2020 scenarios, respectively. The health impact was assessed for the period 2008-2040. At Baseline, 1-2 cases per year of cancer attributable to MSW plants were estimated, as well as 26 cases per year of adverse pregnancy outcomes (including low birth weight and birth defects), 102 persons with respiratory symptoms, and about a thousand affected from annoyance caused by odours. These annual estimates are translated into 2,725 years of life with disability (DALYs) estimated for the entire period. The DALYs are reduced by approximately 20% and 80% in the two future scenarios. Even in these cases, health impact is given by the greater effects on pregnancy and the annoyance associated with the odours of plants. In spite of the limitations due to the inevitable assumptions required by the present exercise, the proposed methodology is suitable for a first approach to assess different policies that can be adopted in regional planning in the field of waste management. The greatest reduction in health impact is achieved with a virtuous policy of reducing waste production and a significant increase in the collection and recycling of waste.
- Published
- 2014
32. [Methods for health impact assessment of policies for municipal solid waste management: the SESPIR Project]
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Federica, Parmagnani, Andrea, Ranzi, Carla, Ancona, Paola, Angelini, Monica, Chiusolo, Ennio, Cadum, Paolo, Lauriola, and Francesco, Forastiere
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Time Factors ,Health Policy ,Urban Health ,Environmental Exposure ,Incineration ,Models, Theoretical ,Risk Assessment ,Refuse Disposal ,Government Programs ,Waste Disposal Facilities ,Biodegradation, Environmental ,Italy ,Population Surveillance ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Humans ,Environmental Pollutants ,Health Impact Assessment ,Quality-Adjusted Life Years ,Environmental Health - Abstract
The Project Epidemiological Surveillance of Health Status of Resident Population Around the Waste Treatment Plants (SESPIR) included five Italian regions (Emilia-Romagna, Piedmont, Lazio, Campania, and Sicily) and the National Institute of Health in the period 2010-2013. SESPIR was funded by the Ministry of Health as part of the National centre for diseases prevention and control (CCM) programme of 2010 with the general objective to provide methods and operational tools for the implementation of surveillance systems for waste and health, aimed at assessing the impact of the municipal solid waste (MSW) treatment cycle on the health of the population. The specific objective was to assess health impacts resulting from the presence of disposal facilities related to different regional scenarios of waste management. Suitable tools for analysis of integrated assessment of environmental and health impact were developed and applied, using current demographic, environmental and health data. In this article, the methodology used for the quantitative estimation of the impact on the health of populations living nearby incinerators, landfills and mechanical biological treatment plants is showed, as well as the analysis of three different temporal scenarios: the first related to the existing plants in the period 2008-2009 (baseline), the second based on regional plans, the latter referring to MSW virtuous policy management based on reduction of produced waste and an intense recovery policy.
- Published
- 2014
33. [EpiAir Project: introduction and reading guide to the articles]
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Ennio, Cadum and Francesco, Forastiere
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Italy ,Air Pollution ,Epidemiological Monitoring ,Publications ,Urban Health ,Humans ,Guidelines as Topic ,Environmental Monitoring - Published
- 2013
34. Short-term effects of particulate air pollution on mortality in 25 cities in Italy and the role of the individual susceptibility–results of the EPIAIR2 project
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Ennio Cadum, Annunziata Faustini, Massimo Stafoggia, Giovanna Berti, Francesco Forastiere, Cecilia Scarinzi, and Ester Alessandrini
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Individual susceptibility ,Environmental health ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Environmental science ,Particulate air pollution ,General Environmental Science ,Term (time) - Published
- 2013
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35. The impact of aircraft noise on the health of population living near six Italian airports
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T Fabozzi, Maria Angela Vigotti, G Licitra, Giorgio Cattani, Roberto Sozzi, Anconac, S Simonato, Ennio Cadum, Carla Ancona, F. Mataloni, M Ottino, Francesco Forastiere, S Pisani, and D Camerino
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education.field_of_study ,Aircraft noise ,Noise pollution ,education ,Population ,Noise ,Aeronautics ,Environmental health ,parasitic diseases ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Environmental science ,Environmental noise ,human activities ,Health impact assessment ,health care economics and organizations ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Background: Aircraft noise has been associated with several health effects. Because of the great success of low cost flights, small airports have been turned into international airports thus exposi...
- Published
- 2013
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36. Short-term effects of PM2.5 and NO2 on mortality in 25 Italian cities: the EpiAir2 project
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Ester Alessandrini, Massimo Stafoggia, Ennio Cadum, Cecilia Scarinzi, Annunziata Faustini, Francesco Forastiere, and Monica Chiusolo
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Ambient air pollution ,Environmental health ,Gaseous pollutants ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Environmental science ,Particulates ,General Environmental Science ,Term (time) - Abstract
Background. Several large epidemiological studies have provided evidence of short-term adverse effects of particulate matter (PM) and gaseous pollutants on health. In Italy, an ongoing surveillance...
- Published
- 2013
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37. Associations between emergency department admissions for respiratory disorders and daily exposure to air pollution: first results of the Italian EPIAIR project
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Annunziata Faustini, Andrea Evangelista, Laura Crosetto, Ennio Cadum, Francesco Forastiere, Giovanna Berti, Enrica Migliore, Claudia Galassi, and Elisabetta Chellini
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Air pollution ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Emergency department ,Respiratory system ,Daily exposure ,medicine.disease_cause ,business ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2013
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38. LONG TERM EFFECTS OF PM2.5 IN ITALY: PRELIMINARY RESULTS OF THE INHISS COHORT STUDY
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Giuseppe Costa, Martina Gandini, Gabriella Sebastiani, Morena Stroscia, Gabriele Zanini, Ennio Cadum, and M Demaria
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business.industry ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Medicine ,business ,General Environmental Science ,Demography ,Term (time) ,Cohort study - Published
- 2013
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39. Environment and Health - Bridging South, North, East and West. Basel, Switzerland 19-23 August 2013
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F. Mataloni, T Fabozzi, Ennio Cadum, S Pisani, Francesco Forastiere, Giorgio Cattani, G Licitra, D Camerino, M Ottino, Maria Angela Vigotti, Carla Ancona, Roberto Sozzi, Anconac, and S Simonato
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Aircraft noise ,Aeronautics ,Noise pollution ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,parasitic diseases ,education ,Population ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Environmental science ,human activities ,health care economics and organizations - Abstract
Background: Aircraft noise has been associated with several health effects. Because of the great success of low cost flights, small airports have been turned into international airports thus exposi...
- Published
- 2013
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- View/download PDF
40. Short-term associations between fine and coarse particulate matter and hospitalizations in Southern Europe: results from the MED-PARTICLES project
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Aurelio Tobías, Angeliki Karanasiou, Julio Diaz, Andrea Ranzi, Elisa Stivanello, Francesco Forastiere, Martina Gandini, Klea Katsouyanni, Massimo Stafoggia, Adriana Pietrodangelo, Begoña ARTINANO, Mathilde Pascal, Xavier Querol, Ennio Cadum, Jesús D De la Rosa, THOMAS MAGGOS, Jose Barrera-Gómez, Francesca K. De'Donato, VANA SYPSA, Stefano Zauli Sajani, Jorge Pey, Benedicte Jacquemin, Lorenzo Pizzi, Konstantinos Eleftheriadis, José María De la Rosa Arranz, MARIA CATRAMBONE, European Union, Stafoggia, Massimo, Samoli, Evangelia, Alessandrini, Ester, Cadum, Ennio, Ostro, Bart, Berti, Giovanna, Faustini, Annunziata, Jacquemin, Benedicte, Linares, Cristina, Pascal, Mathilde, Randi, Giorgia, Ranzi, Andrea, Stivanello, Elisa, and Forastiere, Francesco
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Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Respiratory Tract Diseases ,complex mixtures ,Cardiovascular Disease ,Environmental health ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Poisson Distribution ,Cities ,Particle Size ,Respiratory Tract Disease ,Medicine (all) ,Research ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Particulates ,Models, Theoretical ,Citie ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesi ,Term (time) ,Europe ,Hospitalization ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Environmental science ,Particulate Matter ,Human - Abstract
Background: Evidence on the short-term effects of fine and coarse particles on morbidity in Europe is scarce and inconsistent. Objectives: We aimed to estimate the association between daily concentrations of fine and coarse particles with hospitalizations for cardiovascular and respiratory conditions in eight Southern European cities, within the MED-PARTICLES project. Methods: City-specific Poisson models were fitted to estimate associations of daily concentrations of particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter ≤ 2.5 μm (PM2.5), ≤ 10 μm (PM10), and their difference (PM2.5–10) with daily counts of emergency hospitalizations for cardiovascular and respiratory diseases. We derived pooled estimates from random-effects meta-analysis and evaluated the robustness of results to co-pollutant exposure adjustment and model specification. Pooled concentration–response curves were estimated using a meta-smoothing approach. Results: We found significant associations between all PM fractions and cardiovascular admissions. Increases of 10 μg/m3 in PM2.5, 6.3 μg/m3 in PM2.5–10, and 14.4 μg/m3 in PM10 (lag 0–1 days) were associated with increases in cardiovascular admissions of 0.51% (95% CI: 0.12, 0.90%), 0.46% (95% CI: 0.10, 0.82%), and 0.53% (95% CI: 0.06, 1.00%), respectively. Stronger associations were estimated for respiratory hospitalizations, ranging from 1.15% (95% CI: 0.21, 2.11%) for PM10 to 1.36% (95% CI: 0.23, 2.49) for PM2.5 (lag 0–5 days). Conclusions: PM2.5 and PM2.5–10 were positively associated with cardiovascular and respiratory admissions in eight Mediterranean cities. Information on the short-term effects of different PM fractions on morbidity in Southern Europe will be useful to inform European policies on air quality standards. Citation: Stafoggia M, Samoli E, Alessandrini E, Cadum E, Ostro B, Berti G, Faustini A, Jacquemin B, Linares C, Pascal M, Randi G, Ranzi A, Stivanello E, Forastiere F, the MED-PARTICLES Study Group. 2013. Short-term associations between fine and coarse particulate matter and hospitalizations in Southern Europe: results from the MED-PARTICLES project. Environ Health Perspect 121:1026–1033; http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.1206151
- Published
- 2013
41. [Human biomonitoring and variation of haematic parameters in a population exposed to PCB and dioxin near a steel plant in the lower Susa Valley]
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Monica, Chiusolo, Cristiana, Ivaldi, Enrico, Procopio, Giuseppe Maria, Greco, Maria, Lodato, and Ennio, Cadum
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Adult ,Blood Glucose ,Male ,Industrial Waste ,Endocrine System ,Food Contamination ,Dioxins ,Endocrine System Diseases ,Hemoglobins ,Young Adult ,Pregnancy ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Aged ,Blood Proteins ,Environmental Exposure ,Middle Aged ,Respiration Disorders ,Lipids ,Polychlorinated Biphenyls ,Hormones ,Abortion, Spontaneous ,Italy ,Steel ,Population Surveillance ,Metallurgy ,Environmental Pollutants ,Female ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
to evaluate the degree of exposure to PCB in a population resident in the lower Susa Valley and its effects on general and endocrine homeostasis. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS AND MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: in the lower Susa Valley (Piedmont, Italy), there is a steel secondary casting plant (i.e. by fusion of scrap iron), active since the '50s. The emissions of PCB and dioxin coming from the furnace were found in samples of herb, pulse and ground in a preliminary environmental characterisation study. During 2005-2006 we run an epidemiologic study of biomonitoring (measuring as outcome common haematochemical parameters, hormonal parameters, haematic PCB) on a sample of subjects resident in the municipalities with higher levels of PCB and dioxin contamination (exposed subjects), that was compared with another sample (unexposed) of subjects residing in other areas of the Susa Valley.the final sample consisted of 244 subjects (119 unexposed and 125 exposed), balanced by gender, age, education and representative of the Susa Valley population. The greater part of hormonal and toxic parameters showed worse values among exposed than among unexposed, including PCB median value (2.30 μg/l among exposed vs. 1.90 μg/l among unexposed). The difference however was not statistically significant and the values were lower than the population reference values (7.2 μg/l). Haematic PCB values were significantly and positively correlated with age and alcohol consumption and not significantly with male gender. The distribution of the principal haematochemical parameters (hemochrome, total, LDL and HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, glucose, creatinine, bilirubin, transaminases, gamma-glutamiltranspeptidase, proteine electrophoresis) showed also, on the whole, worse values among exposed compared to unexposed, even if the difference was not statistically significant for single values.the exposed population showed higher values of PCB haematic values and alterations of the hormonal and common heamatochemical parameters compared to unexposed population, even if within reference limits.
- Published
- 2012
42. Particulate air pollution and hospital admissions for cardiac diseases in potentially sensitive subgroups
- Author
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Paola, Colais, Annunziata, Faustini, Massimo, Stafoggia, Giovanna, Berti, Luigi, Bisanti, Ennio, Cadum, Achille, Cernigliaro, Sandra, Mallone, Barbara, Pacelli, Maria, Serinelli, Lorenzo, Simonato, Maria Angela, Vigotti, Francesco, Forastiere, and S, Scondotto
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Heart Diseases ,Epidemiology ,Air Pollution ,short term effects ,Cardiac Hospital admissions ,susceptible ,MEDLINE ,Air pollution ,Effect modifier ,medicine.disease_cause ,Effect Modifier, Epidemiologic ,Patient Admission ,Sex Factors ,Sex factors ,Risk Factors ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Humans ,Intensive care medicine ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Air Pollutants ,Inhalation Exposure ,Cross-Over Studies ,Ambient air pollution ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Particulate air pollution ,Logistic Models ,Italy ,Female ,Particulate Matter ,business - Abstract
Although numerous studies have provided evidence of an association between ambient air pollution and acute cardiac morbidity, little is known regarding susceptibility factors.We conducted a time-stratified case-crossover study in 9 Italian cities between 2001 and 2005 to estimate the short-term association between airborne particles with aerodynamic diameter10 μm (PM10) and cardiac hospital admissions, and to identify susceptible groups. We estimated associations between daily PM10 and all cardiac diseases, acute coronary syndrome, arrhythmias and conduction disorders, and heart failure for 167,895 hospitalized subjects ≥ 65 years of age. Effect modification was assessed for age, sex, and a priori-defined hospital diagnoses (mainly cardiovascular and respiratory conditions) from the previous 2 years as susceptibility factors.The increased risk of cardiac admissions was 1.0% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.7% to 1.4%) per 10 μg/m PM10 at lag 0. The effect was slightly higher for heart failure (lag 0, 1.4% [0.7% to 2.0%]) and acute coronary syndrome (lag 0-1, 1.1% [0.4% to 1.9%]) than for arrhythmias (lag 0, 1.0% [0.2% to 1.8%]). Women were at higher risk of heart failure (2.0% [1.2% to 2.8%]; test for interaction, P = 0.022), whereas men were at higher risk of arrhythmias (1.9% [0.8% to 3.0%]; test for interaction, P = 0.020). Subjects aged 75-84 years were at higher risk of admissions for coronary events (2.6% [1.5% to 3.8%]; test for interaction, P = 0.001). None of the identified chronic conditions was a clear marker of susceptibility.An important effect of PM10 on hospitalizations for cardiac diseases was found in Italian cities. Sex and older age were susceptibility factors.
- Published
- 2012
43. [Air pollution: the environmental factor with the highest health burden]
- Author
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Francesco, Forastiere, Annunziata, Faustini, Massimo, Stafoggia, Chiara, Badaloni, Gabriele, Zanini, Gino, Briganti, Andrea, Cappelletti, Martina, Gandini, Giovanna, Berti, and Ennio, Cadum
- Subjects
Italy ,Air Pollution ,Humans ,Environmental Exposure - Published
- 2011
44. A SURVEILLANCE PROGRAM ON AIR POLLUTION EFFECTS: THE ITALIAN EPIAIR PROJECT
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Ennio Cadum and Francesco Forastiere
- Subjects
Air pollution ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Environmental science ,medicine.disease_cause ,Environmental planning ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2011
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45. Hospital admissions and mortality as complementary outcomes in evaluating the short-term effects of air pollution on respiratory health
- Author
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Annunziata Faustini, Corrado Scarnato, Giovanna Berti, Achille Cernigliaro, Luigi Bisanti, Massimo Stafoggia, Roberta Tessari, Paola Colais, R Primerano, Sandra Mallone, Ennio Cadum, Maria Angela Vigotti, and Francesco Forastiere
- Subjects
hospital admissions ,respiratory health ,business.industry ,air pollution ,Air pollution ,medicine.disease_cause ,Term (time) ,Environmental health ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Medicine ,business ,Respiratory health ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2011
46. [The results of EpiAir and the national and international literature]
- Author
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Ennio, Cadum, Giovanna, Berti, Annibale, Biggeri, Luigi, Bisanti, Annunziata, Faustini, and Francesco, Forastiere
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Publishing ,Internationality ,Italy ,Epidemiology ,Air Pollution ,Population Surveillance ,Urban Health ,Program Evaluation - Abstract
The EpiAir Project evaluated the short term effects of air pollution on mortality and morbidity in 10 Italian cities (Milano, Mestre-Venezia, Torino, Bologna, Firenze, Pisa, Roma, Taranto, Cagliari e Palermo) during the period 2001-2005. A time-stratified case-crossover design was adopted, with results equivalent to those found using the traditional time series approach. The levels of PM10, NO2 and ozone measured in the Italian cities during the study period were higher than the reference European standards and the World Health Organization guidelines indicating a persistent exposure of Italian people to toxic air pollutants. The results of the EpiAir study showed higher effect estimates for mortality related to PM10 and NO2 than those reported in international studies and in previous Italian analyses. The percentage increase of natural mortality associated with a 10 microg/m3 increase in PM10 concentration was 0.69%, while it was 0.33% in Europe (APHEA study), 0.29% in North America (NNMAPS study) and 0.31% in the previous Italian meta-analysis of data collected in the nineties (MISA study). An important effect of PM10 and NO2 has been observed on hospitalizations for acute cardiac diseases, in particular myocardial infarction and heart failure, while NO2 increased the frequency of hospital admissions for respiratory diseases, especially asthma. The lag time between exposure and health effects was immediate for cardiovascular diseases and delayed for respiratory diseases. The study considered several susceptibility factors and elderly subjects were found to be more vulnerable to PM10 effects. The findings suggest the need for continuous epidemiologic surveillance of the health effects of air pollutants in Italy together with immediate national and local preventive programmes.
- Published
- 2010
47. [Testing of interventions for prevention of heat wave related deaths: results among frail elderly and methodological problems]
- Author
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Chiara, Marinacci, Maurizio, Marino, Elisa, Ferracin, Lidia, Fubini, Luisella, Gilardi, Pierantonio, Visentin, Ennio, Cadum, and Giuseppe, Costa
- Subjects
Aged, 80 and over ,Hospitalization ,Male ,Italy ,Cause of Death ,Frail Elderly ,Extreme Heat ,Humans ,Female ,Aged - Abstract
to evaluate the impact of a programme based on soft home care services and an offer of social caretaking, compared to one based only on soft home care, for the prevention of heat-related health events among clinically and/or functionally frail elderly.cluster randomised controlled trial.the study population included 2,612 persons over 75 years of age living alone in the city of Turin, North-West Italy, who were classified as clinically (hospitalization with specific diagnoses before summer 2004) and/or functionally (were receiving a disability pension) frail.a programme' s impact was evaluated on the basis of the hospitalizations and deaths that occurred during summer 2004, using gender-specific multilevel logistic regression models, controlling first for age and then also for education and income.among males, a weak protection against emergency hospitalization was observed within the group randomised to soft home care services and offer of social caretaking, compared to the only soft home care group (OR=0.33, 95% CI=0.11; 0.96). Among females, the programme including social caretaking seemed to lower the overall risk of hospitalization (OR=0.96, 95% CI=0.93; 0.98).this study has two important public health implications: first, it highlights the potential impact of programmes based on both soft home care and offer of social caretaking; second, it helps to raise awareness, both among health/social work and in the community, of the need for protection during summer periods for the elderly.
- Published
- 2009
48. Effects of cold weather on mortality: results from 15 European cities within the PHEWE project
- Author
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Klea Katsouyanni, Jordi Sunyer, Annibale Biggeri, Paola Michelozzi, Ferran Ballester, Antonis Analitis, Ennio Cadum, Ana Hojs, Bertil Forsberg, Pekka Tiittanen, Luigi Bisanti, Michela Baccini, Patrick J. Goodman, and Ursula Kirchmayer
- Subjects
Distributed lag ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Urban Population ,Epidemiology ,Respiratory Tract Diseases ,urban health ,symbols.namesake ,Young Adult ,Risk Factors ,Cause of Death ,medicine ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Humans ,Mortality displacement ,Poisson regression ,Child ,Cause of death ,Aged ,Cold weather ,business.industry ,Public health ,Infant, Newborn ,Urban Health ,temperature ,Infant ,PHEWE Project ,Middle Aged ,cold ,mortality ,Confidence interval ,Apparent temperature ,Cold Temperature ,Europe ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,weather ,Child, Preschool ,symbols ,Public Health ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Weather-related health effects have attracted renewed interest because of the observed and predicted climate change. The authors studied the short-term effects of cold weather on mortality in 15 European cities. The effects of minimum apparent temperature on cause- and age-specific daily mortality were assessed for the cold season (October-March) by using data from 1990-2000. For city-specific analysis, the authors used Poisson regression and distributed lag models, controlling for potential confounders. Meta-regression models summarized the results and explored heterogeneity. A 1 degrees C decrease in temperature was associated with a 1.35% (95% confidence interval (CI): 1.16,1.53) increase in the daily number of total natural deaths and a 1.72% (95% CI: 1.44, 2.01), 3.30% (95% CI: 2.61, 3.99), and 1.25% (95% CI: 0.77, 1.73) increase in cardiovascular, respiratory, and cerebrovascular deaths, respectively. The increase was greater for the older age groups. The cold effect was found to be greater in warmer (southern) cities and persisted up to 23 days, with no evidence of mortality displacement. Cold-related mortality is an important public health problem across Europe. It should not be underestimated by public health authorities because of the recent focus on heat-wave episodes.
- Published
- 2008
49. [Environmental epidemiology and polluted areas in Italy]
- Author
-
Fabrizio, Bianchi, Annibale, Biggeri, Ennio, Cadum, Pietro, Comba, Francesco, Forastiere, Marco, Martuzzi, and Benedetto, Terracini
- Subjects
Italy ,Epidemiology ,Risk Factors ,Epidemiological Monitoring ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Humans ,Environmental Pollution ,Environmental Health ,Environmental Monitoring - Published
- 2006
50. [Outdoor risk factors and adverse effects on respiratory health in childhood]
- Author
-
Giovanna, Berti, Enrica, Migliore, Ennio, Cadum, Giovannino, Ciccone, Massimiliano, Bugiani, Claudia, Galassi, Annibale, Biggeri, and Giovanni, Viegi
- Subjects
Air Pollutants ,Adolescent ,Respiratory Tract Diseases ,Health Surveys ,Asthma ,Cough ,Italy ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Bronchitis ,Child ,Vehicle Emissions - Abstract
Several epidemiological studies have provided evidence that exposure to auto vehicular traffic increases the prevalence of bronchitis, cough and deficits in lung function and may exacerbate pre-existing asthma, especially in children. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of road traffic pollution on respiratory health in a large sample of Italian school children. Eighteen percent of the SIDRIA-2 sample reported high traffic density in the zone of residence; 60% and 20% of subjects reported a very frequent transit of cars and lorries, respectively on the street of residence. High frequency of lorry traffic in the street of residence was associated with significantly increased risks for chronic cough or phlegm and sinusitis symptoms. These results, confirming previous findings (SIDRIA, 1994-95), show that children living near streets with intense traffic of heavy vehicles are at higher risk for adverse respiratory effects, especially for productive cough.
- Published
- 2005
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