Leonardo Aragão, Elisabetta Ronchieri, Giuseppe Ambrosio, Diego Ciangottini, Sara Cutini, Doina Cristina Duma, Pasquale Lubrano, Barbara Martelli, Davide Salomoni, Giusy Sergi, Daniele Spiga, Fabrizio Stracci, Loriano Storchi
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This paper aims to assess the impact of restrictive measures against the COVID-19 spread on the air quality of the most representative urban centers in Italy during the 66 days of the first lockdown, integrating a broad and detailed set of socioeconomic and health data into machine learning techniques and correlation analysis. Hierarchical Clustering analysis applied to all 104 Italian provinces indicated a group of six provinces to represent the urban environment in Italy. In contrast, correlation analyses suggested two meteorological parameters and four other air quality parameters as the most skilful at expressing changes in air quality during the first lockdown. Filtering the effects of seasonality, NO concentrations were the ones that most acted in improving urban air quality, showing reductions of up to 48% in all analyzed provinces, directly related to reductions in population mobility in this period (other studies reported an incisive role of pollutants as \(NO_{2}\) and \(PM_{10}\) or \(PM_{2.5}\) in the SARS-CoV-3 spread). However, there were increases in \(PM_{10}\) concentrations related to the use of wood burning for heating, and in \(SO_2\) concentrations associated with the food industry, a sector slightly affected by the restrictive measures for being framed as essential. Naples was the only province which reported concentration reductions in all pollutants evaluated, including ozone (7%). However, it was the one that registered the most significant increases during the first days after the lockdown, probably due to the less restrictive measures applied to provinces with the lowest contamination numbers.
期刊介绍:
Air Quality, Atmosphere, and Health is a multidisciplinary journal which, by its very name, illustrates the broad range of work it publishes and which focuses on atmospheric consequences of human activities and their implications for human and ecological health.
It offers research papers, critical literature reviews and commentaries, as well as special issues devoted to topical subjects or themes.
International in scope, the journal presents papers that inform and stimulate a global readership, as the topic addressed are global in their import. Consequently, we do not encourage submission of papers involving local data that relate to local problems. Unless they demonstrate wide applicability, these are better submitted to national or regional journals.
Air Quality, Atmosphere & Health addresses such topics as acid precipitation; airborne particulate matter; air quality monitoring and management; exposure assessment; risk assessment; indoor air quality; atmospheric chemistry; atmospheric modeling and prediction; air pollution climatology; climate change and air quality; air pollution measurement; atmospheric impact assessment; forest-fire emissions; atmospheric science; greenhouse gases; health and ecological effects; clean air technology; regional and global change and satellite measurements.
This journal benefits a diverse audience of researchers, public health officials and policy makers addressing problems that call for solutions based in evidence from atmospheric and exposure assessment scientists, epidemiologists, and risk assessors. Publication in the journal affords the opportunity to reach beyond defined disciplinary niches to this broader readership.