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Linking stroke mortality with air pollution, income, and greenness in northwest Florida: an ecological geographical study

Zhiyong Hu1 email, Johan Liebens1 email and K Ranga Rao2 email

1Department of Environmental Studies, University of West Florida, Pensacola, FL, USA

2Center for Environmental Diagnostics and Bioremediation, University of West Florida, Pensacola, FL, USA

author email corresponding author email

International Journal of Health Geographics 2008, 7:20doi:10.1186/1476-072X-7-20

Published: 1 May 2008

Abstract

Background

Relatively few studies have examined the association between air pollution and stroke mortality. Inconsistent and inclusive results from existing studies on air pollution and stroke justify the need to continue to investigate the linkage between stroke and air pollution. No studies have been done to investigate the association between stroke and greenness. The objective of this study was to examine if there is association of stroke with air pollution, income and greenness in northwest Florida.

Results

Our study used an ecological geographical approach and dasymetric mapping technique. We adopted a Bayesian hierarchical model with a convolution prior considering five census tract specific covariates. A 95% credible set which defines an interval having a 0.95 posterior probability of containing the parameter for each covariate was calculated from Markov Chain Monte Carlo simulations. The 95% credible sets are (-0.286, -0.097) for household income, (0.034, 0.144) for traffic air pollution effect, (0.419, 1.495) for emission density of monitored point source polluters, (0.413, 1.522) for simple point density of point source polluters without emission data, and (-0.289,-0.031) for greenness. Household income and greenness show negative effects (the posterior densities primarily cover negative values). Air pollution covariates have positive effects (the 95% credible sets cover positive values).

Conclusion

High risk of stroke mortality was found in areas with low income level, high air pollution level, and low level of exposure to green space.


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