Researcher ID

Diet and Global Burden of Disease

Major study in The Lancet about global burden of disease and diet. Low intake of certain nutrients seems associated with greater impact than the high intake of deprecated foods. Diets low in whole grains (<125 g/day) are associated with the greatest loss of  Disability-Adjusted Life Years (DALY), across the world, but really in every region. Low Read More

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Causal modeling of air pollution

The mortality associated with exposure to PM2.5 and NO2 has long been described, but few studies have used causal modeling methods that can help moving from statistical association to causal inference. Researchers at the Harvard/MIT ACE Center  used three different methods to estimate the causal effect of local pollution on mortality in 135 US cities. Read More

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Air pollution and chronic bronchitis

Air pollution exposure was found to be associated with chronic bronchitis (chronic cough and sputum production) in a recent study by researchers at the University of Washington. The study was conducted on the large Sisters Study cohort (about 50,000 participants), limiting analysis to never-smokers, and using exposure models to PM10, PM2.5, and NO2 developed for Read More

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Traffic and plasma glucose

Proximity to roadways was associated with modestly higher blood glucose levels in healthy people, in a study supported by the Harvard Clean Air Research Center and the ACE center. Participants in the Framingham Offspring and Third generation cohorts (average age 51 years) in New England, who  were without diabetes, and were examined for a variety Read More

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Cost of traffic congestion: beyond just wasted time

The impact of traffic congestion during rush hours due to air pollution was estimated in terms of mortality and economic cost by researchers at the  Harvard Clean Air Research Center and ACE Center. While other studies have examined on the effects of traffic emissions, the economic cost of traffic congestion has typically been estimated in Read More

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Short-term exposure to air pollution: mortality without threshold

Short-term exposure to PM2.5 and ozone were significantly associate with mortality risk without evidence of a threshold, in a study on the entire Medicare population. Researchers at the Harvard/MIT ACE center examined all-cause mortality risk associated with same-day and prior day exposure to PM2.5 and ozone (adjusting for simultaneous exposure) in a case-crossover design applied Read More

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Nitrogen oxides and Interstitial Lung Disease

Exposure to nitrogen oxides was associated with Interstitial Lung Disease (ILD) in a study on older adults part of the MESA Air project  at the University of Washington. ILD is a group of chronic lung diseases characterized by pulmonary inflammation and fibrosis, affecting about 0.5% of older adults, and generally diagnosed late in the disease Read More

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Factors in PM2.5 mortality

Numerous factors affect the association between PM2.5 and mortality, including individual and neighborhood socioeconomic status, PM composition and temperature. In a study of 13 million Medicare beneficiaries (older than 65) conducted in the SouthEastern US, researchers at the Harvard ACE Center examined exposures using a hybrid spatio-temporal model that represented more accurately rural populations and Read More

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Traffic and fatty liver disease

Proximity to major roadways was associated with fat accumulation in the liver, in a recently published study from the Harvard Clean Air Research Center. Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (hepatic steatosis) is a common condition, closely linked with indicators of cardiometabolic syndrome (cardiovascular disease and insulin resistance). Over 2,000 participants from the Framingham Offspring Study and Read More

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Wildfires and respiratory hospitalization

Exposure to wildfire-specific PM2.5 was associated with increased respiratory hospitalization. In a study with the Medicare population in the Western United States, researchers from the Harvard  Clean Air Research Center estimated exposures to wildfire-specific PM2.5 using a global chemical transport model, between 2004 and 2009. About 5 million Medicare participants were exposed to at least Read More