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Assessing external exposome by implementing an Environmental Data Management System using Open Data

Authors :
Sofia Tagliaferro
Sara Maio
Federico Pirona
Ilaria Stanisci
Giuseppe Sarno
Patrizia Silvi
Marianthi Kermenidou
Nafsika Papaioannou
Reena Perchard
Igor Prpic
Kinga Polanska
Joanna Jerzynska
Elisabete Ramos
Joaquim Rovira
Jordina Belmonte
Janja Snoj Snoj Tratnik
Milena Horvat
David Kocman
Zdravko Spiric
Jacqueline Zickella
Salvatore Fasola
Stefania La Grutta
Velia Malizia
Laura Montalbano
EarlyFOOD
HEALS EXHES
Sandra Baldacci
Isabella Annesi-Maesano
Source :
Scientific Reports, Vol 14, Iss 1, Pp 1-14 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2024.

Abstract

Abstract Due to the increasing importance of exposome in environmental epidemiology, feasibility and usefulness of an Environmental Data Management System (EDMS) using Open Data was evaluated. The EDMS includes data from 10 European cities (Celje (Slovenia), Łódź (Poland), Manchester (UK), Palermo (Italy), Paris (France), Porto (Portugal), Regensburg (Germany), Reus (Spain), Rijeka (Croatia), Thessaloniki (Greece)) about external non-specific and specific exposome factors at the city or country level (2017–2020). Findings showed that the highest values of life expectancy were in Reus females (86 years) and Palermo males (81 years). UK had the highest obesity rate (28%), Croatia the highest prescribed drug consumption (62%), Greece and Portugal the highest smoking rates (37%, 42%) and daily alcohol consumption (21%), respectively. The most polluted cities were Thessaloniki for PM10 (38 µg/m3), Łódź for PM2.5 (25 µg/m3), Porto for NO2 (62 µg/m3) and Rijeka for O3 (92 µg/m3). Thessaloniki had the highest grey space (98%) and Łódź the highest cumulative amount of pollen (39,041 p/m3). The highest daily noise levels ≥ 55 dB was in Reus (81% to traffic) and Regensburg (21% to railway). In drinking water, arsenic had the highest value in Thessaloniki (6.4 µg/L), boron in Celje (24 mg/L) and lead in Paris (46.7 µg/L). Portugal and Greece showed the highest pesticide residues in food (7%). In conclusion, utilizing open-access databases enables the translation of research findings into actionable strategies for public health interventions.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4b4281be711e4b1cbeca1fc59fa8cf01
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-62924-0