Assessing additive effects of air pollutants on mortality rate in Massachusetts.
Yaguang WeiBrent CoullPetros KoutrakisJiabei YangLongxiang LiAntonella ZanobettiJoel SchwartzPublished in: Environmental health : a global access science source (2021)
This study provides more rigorous causal evidence between PM2.5, O3, and NO2 exposures and mortality, even at low levels. The largest effect estimate for long-term PM2.5 suggests that reducing PM2.5 could gain the most substantial benefits. The consistency between LPM/WLS and moonRF suggests that there were not many interactions and high-order nonlinearities. In the big data context, the proposed methods will be useful for future scientific work in estimating causality on an additive scale.