Incidence of depression in relation to transportation noise exposure and noise annoyance in the SAPALDIA study
Ikenna C. Eze, María Foraster, Emmanuel Schaffner, Danielle Vienneau, Reto Pieren, Medea Imboden, Jean Marc Wunderli, Christian Cajochen, Mark Brink, Martin Röösli, Nicole Probst‐Hensch
Abstract
: 2.29 (1.02, 5.14)], and remained stable to noise annoyance. Transportation noise level and noise annoyance may jointly and independently influence the risk of depression. Combined long-term exposures to noise level seems to be most detrimental, largely acting via annoyance. The moderation of noise annoyance effect by daytime sleepiness and physical activity further contribute to clarifying the involved mechanisms. More evidence is needed to confirm these findings for effective public health control of depression and noise exposure burden.
Topics & Concepts
AnnoyanceRelative riskMedicineDepression (economics)ConfoundingConfidence intervalPoisson regressionProspective cohort studyIncidence (geometry)Cohort studyEnvironmental healthTraffic noiseNoise (video)AudiologyPopulationInternal medicineMathematicsNoise reductionEconomicsLoudnessArtificial intelligenceImage (mathematics)GeometryComputer scienceMacroeconomicsNoise Effects and ManagementAir Quality and Health ImpactsHearing Loss and Rehabilitation