2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2009.03.004
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Social disadvantage, air pollution, and asthma physician visits in Toronto, Canada

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Cited by 63 publications
(62 citation statements)
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References 41 publications
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“…According to several recent studies, high-income neighborhoods tend to exhibit low asthma prevalence, while ambulatory visits to the physician for asthma were found to be associated with air pollution and disproportionately increased among lowincome socio-economic groups (Burra et al 2009;Gupta et al 2009;Subramanian et al 2009). The results of the present analysis provide additional evidence for the presence of such general linkages.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…According to several recent studies, high-income neighborhoods tend to exhibit low asthma prevalence, while ambulatory visits to the physician for asthma were found to be associated with air pollution and disproportionately increased among lowincome socio-economic groups (Burra et al 2009;Gupta et al 2009;Subramanian et al 2009). The results of the present analysis provide additional evidence for the presence of such general linkages.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…As the Anderson metaanalysis found a greater effect in children, it would have been interesting to see the analysis split by age group. A study in Toronto did find a significant relationship in children across both sexes and in the top and bottom quintiles of socioeconomic position (Burra et al, 2009). A positive and statistically significant association was also found for SO 2 and emergency room visits for wheeze in children aged 0-2 years in a multicity study in Italy (Orazzo et al, 2009).…”
Section: Short-term Exposure and Respiratory Hospital Admissionsmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…While of similar study design, these studies assessed associations at different scales (region, county, ZIP code, census block and census block group), considered different indicators of SES and used different cut-points to stratify populations by neighbourhood SES (eg, median,25–31 tertile,24 quartile20 or quintile16–18 30 values of neighbourhood SES indicators). Among these studies, education, household income and poverty were most commonly used as indicators of neighbourhood SES; however, reported conclusions about effect modification by SES were contradictory between studies using similar indicators16 30 31 33 as well as between different SES indicators within the same study 28–31…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%