Associations between Short-Term Exposure to Ambient Air Pollution and Influenza: An Individual-Level Case-Crossover Study in Guangzhou, China
Rong Zhang, Ka Yan Lai, Wenhui Liu, Yanhui Liu, Xiaowei Ma, Chris Webster, Lei Luo, Chinmoy Sarkar
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Influenza imposes a heavy burden on public health. Little is known, however, of the associations between detailed measures of exposure to ambient air pollution and influenza at an individual level. OBJECTIVE: We examined individual-level associations between six criteria air pollutants and influenza using case-crossover design. METHODS: ) and carbon monoxide (CO). The exposures were estimated for the day of onset of influenza symptoms (lag 0), 1-7 d before the onset (lags 1-7), as well as an 8-d moving average (lag07), using a random forest model and linked to study participants' home addresses. Conditional logistic regression was developed to investigate the associations between short-term exposure to air pollution and influenza, adjusting for mean temperature, relative humidity, public holidays, population mobility, and community influenza susceptibility. RESULTS: and influenza with a RR of 0.878 (95% CI: 0.866, 0.890). CONCLUSIONS: , is associated with greater risk for influenza. Further studies are necessary to decipher underlying mechanisms and design preventive interventions and policies. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP12145.