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Long-term exposure to particulate air pollution and brachial artery flow-mediated dilation in the Old Order Amish
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Background Atmospheric particulate matter (PM) has been associated with endothelial dysfunction, an early marker of cardiovascular risk. Our aim was to extend this research to a genetically homogenous, geographically stable rural population using location-specific moving-average air pollution exposure estimates indexed to the date of endothelial function measurement. Methods We measured endothelial function using brachial artery flow-mediated dilation (FMD) in 615 community-dwelling healthy Amish participants. Exposures to PM < 2.5 μm (PM 2.5 ) and PM < 10 μm (PM 10 ) were estimated at participants’ residential addresses using previously developed geographic information system-based spatio-temporal models and normalized. Associations between PM exposures and FMD were evaluated using linear mixed-effects regression models, and polynomial distributed lag (PDL) models followed by Bayesian model averaging (BMA) were used to assess response to delayed effects occurring across multiple months. Results Exposure to PM 10 was consistently inversely associated with FMD, with the strongest (most negative) association for a 12-month moving average (− 0.09; 95% CI: − 0.15, − 0.03). Associations with PM 2.5 were also strongest for a 12-month moving average but were weaker than for PM 10 (− 0.07; 95% CI: − 0.13, − 0.09). Associations of PM 2.5 and PM 10 with FMD were somewhat stronger in men than in women, particularly for PM 10 . Conclusions Using location-specific moving-average air pollution exposure estimates, we have shown that 12-month moving-average estimates of PM 2.5 and PM 10 exposure are associated with impaired endothelial function in a rural population.
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MPRC People
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Robin Puett, Ph.D.
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Robin Puett Publications
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Lucie Schmidt, Smith College
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The Impact of Expanding Public Health Insurance on Safety Net Program Participation: Evidence from the ACA Medicaid Expansion
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Coming Up
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MacDorman co-authors midwifery outcomes research
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Midwifery linked to better birth outcomes in state-by-state "report card"
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Research
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Selected Research
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MacDorman on missing mortality rates
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Hazards of childbirth persist in rich and poor nations
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News
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MacDorman research a noted advance for 2016
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Dr. MadDorman's research included in a group 40 articles seen as significant advances for the year
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News
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MacDorman research on U.S. maternal mortality increase featured on CNN
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Maternal mortality rose nationally, doubled in Texas
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News
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MacDorman, Thoma research reveals strong racial disparities in maternal mortality
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Detailed examination of death certificates reframes maternal death data
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News
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Madhavan leads team to study kinship effects
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Five-year R01 project will examine kin relationships in Nairobi, Kenya
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News
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Madhavan post examines using virtual spaces for international collaboration
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Blog post for African Population and Health Research Center
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News
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Marcia Castro, Harvard University TH Chan School of Public Health
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COVID-19 & Mortality in Brazil
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Coming Up