Associations between respiratory health and reported traffic and occupational related exposure

01 Apr 2024
Objective: We aimed to investigate whether the prevalence of respiratory symptoms, asthma and chronic bronchitis increased with the level of self-reported exposure to traffic and occupational related pollution. Setting General population sample from four Swedish cities. 25 889 subjects in the age range between 16-75 years that participated in Swedish part of the GA2LEN study and answered questions related to traffic related and occupation exposure. Methods: The questionnaire focused on two exposure variables: A: How annoyed are you by fumes from traffic in your residential area: none/a little (none), somewhat and very much. B: Have you ever worked in a job that exposed you to vapours, gas, dust or fumes? Outcome variables were respiratory symptoms, asthma and chronic bronchitis. , with adjustment for BMI, sex, age smoking and education. Results: The prevalence of respiratory symptoms, asthma and chronic bronchitis increased with the level of exposure to traffic and occupational related pollution compared to those without (wheeze 27 vs 13%, nocturnal cough 35 vs 22%, asthma 11 vs.6% and chronic bronchitis 22 vs 8%, p<0.0001) The significant associations between respiratory symptoms and traffic and occupational exposure remained significant also after adjusting for sex, age, BMI, smoking and educational level. Conclusion: The prevalence of respiratory symptoms, asthma and bronchitis increase with level of exposure to traffic and occupational exposure. This association independent of adjustment for potential confounders.  

Resource information

Respiratory conditions
  • Other
Respiratory topics
  • Risk factor: indoor air pollution
  • Risk factor: outdoor air pollution
Type of resource
Abstract
Conference
Athens 2024
Author(s)
Johannes Saers1, Josefin Sundh2, Lena Andersson3, Christer Janson4 1School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Örebro University, Örebro, Sweden, 2Department of Respiratory Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Örebro University, Örebro, Sweden, 3Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Örebro University Hospital, Örebro, Örebro, Sweden, 4Department of Medical Sciences, Respiratory, Allergy & Sleep Research, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden