Heterogenous Association Between Mortality and Environmental Factors

Andrew Ju
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Abstract

The global environment has changed rapidly since the Industrial Revolution. Human emissions of heat-trapping greenhouse gases have warmed our earth, leading to more climate extremes. Human activities have also caused air pollution and, thus, worse air quality. Warmer climates and polluted air pose severe risks to human health. This paper focuses on temperature and air pollution as the primary environmental factors and studies their relationship with mortality across different ethnicity and age groups in the U.S. from 2001 to 2021. The main research methods employed in this paper are correlation analysis and least-square regressions. This paper finds that, on average, environmental factors are moderately and positively related to total deaths at a statistically significant level. Such a positive relationship still holds when I further investigate how the environment is associated with mortality by each individual cause. Moreover, heterogeneity in the relationship is identified among different races. In particular, temperature seems to have a larger impact on the Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander and Black populations. At the same time, air pollution is observed to have a very strong association with the mortality of the Asian population, Pacific Islanders, and Hawaiian Natives. Finally, age disparities are not that significant. One finding worth pointing out is that children and teenagers (Age 1-14) appear to be more susceptible to air pollution than other age groups.
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死亡率与环境因素之间的异质性关联
自工业革命以来,全球环境发生了迅速变化。人类排放的致热温室气体使地球变暖,导致气候更加极端。人类活动还造成了空气污染,从而导致空气质量恶化。气候变暖和空气污染严重危害人类健康。本文重点关注温度和空气污染这两个主要环境因素,并研究它们与 2001 年至 2021 年美国不同种族和年龄组的死亡率之间的关系。本文采用的主要研究方法是相关分析和最小二乘法回归。本文发现,平均而言,环境因素与总死亡人数呈中度正相关,且在统计上具有显著性。当我进一步研究环境与各种原因导致的死亡率之间的关系时,这种正相关关系依然存在。此外,不同种族之间的关系也存在差异。特别是,温度似乎对夏威夷原住民/太平洋岛民和黑人的影响更大。与此同时,空气污染与亚裔、太平洋岛民和夏威夷原住民的死亡率有非常密切的关系。最后,年龄差异并不明显。值得指出的是,儿童和青少年(1-14 岁)似乎比其他年龄组更容易受到空气污染的影响。
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