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Unexpected association between ambient ozone and adult insomnia outpatient visits: A large-scale hospital-based study

Growing evidence indicates that short-term ozone (O3) exposure has substantial health consequences, but the relationship between short-term ambient O3 and insomnia, a common sleep disorder, is not clear. This study aimed to investigate the short-term effects of ambient O3 exposure on outpatient visi...

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Published in:Chemosphere (Oxford) 2023-06, Vol.327, p.138484-138484, Article 138484
Main Authors: Li, Dawei, Yang, Lili, Wang, Nan, Hu, Yuegu, Zhou, Yumeng, Du, Ning, Li, Na, Liu, Xiaoling, Yao, Chunyan, Wu, Na, Xiang, Ying, Li, Yafei, Ji, Ailing, Zhou, Laixin, Cai, Tongjian
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Language:English
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Summary:Growing evidence indicates that short-term ozone (O3) exposure has substantial health consequences, but the relationship between short-term ambient O3 and insomnia, a common sleep disorder, is not clear. This study aimed to investigate the short-term effects of ambient O3 exposure on outpatient visits for adult insomnia and to explore the potential modifiers. A large-scale multihospital-based study was carried out in Chongqing, the largest city in Southwest China. Daily data on outpatient visits for adult insomnia, average concentrations of ambient air pollutants and meteorological factors were collected. We conducted quasi-Poisson regression with generalized additive model to assess the association between ambient O3 and outpatient visits for adult insomnia in varied windows of exposure. Subgroup analyses were applied to identify its modifiers. Totally, 140,159 adult insomnia outpatient visits were identified. The daily maximum 8-h average concentration of O3 was 69 μg/m3 during the study period, which greatly below the updated Chinese and WHO recommended limits (daily maximum 8-h average, O3: 100 μg/m3). Short-term O3 exposure was significantly negatively associated with outpatient visits for adult insomnia in different lag periods and the greatest decrease of outpatient visits for adult insomnia was found at lag 02 [0.93% (95% CI: 0.48%, 1.38%)]. Additionally, stronger links between O3 and adult insomnia outpatient visits were presented in cool seasons, and we did not observe any significant modified effects of gender and age. Moreover, the negative O3-insomnia association remained robust after controlling for other common air pollutants and comorbidities. In summary, short-term exposure to lower level of ambient O3, was associated with reduced daily outpatient visits for adult insomnia and such association showed to be more obvious in cool seasons. [Display omitted] •A multihospital-based study with 140,159 adult insomnia outpatient visits.•Short-term ambient O3 was negatively associated with adult insomnia visits.•The exposure-association curve was more slope at low level of O3.•The negative association remained robust in sensitivity analyses.
ISSN:0045-6535
1879-1298
DOI:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2023.138484