Aarhus Universitets segl

Atmospheric pollution and impacts on human health

-  a research area in focus at the Department of Environmental Science (a "Strategic Growth Area", SGA)

Background

According to WHO, air pollution is the world’s largest single environmental health risk, with a wide range of negative health outcomes including both morbidity and mortality and associated with tremendous external costs for society. WHO (2014) estimated 7 Mio. cases of premature deaths globally due to indoor and outdoor air pollution. Studies by the Department of Environmental Science have estimated more than 0.5 Mio. cases in Europe and 4000 cases in Denmark on an annual basis. The related socioeconomic cost are tremendous; around 600 billion Euros per year in Europe and 4 billion Euros alone in Denmark. Thus, the area has both public and political attention, and is part of EU policy:

“The EU’s long-term objective is to achieve levels of air quality that do not result in unacceptable impacts on, and risks to, human health and the environment.”

Air pollution levels in Denmark have been decreasing since year 2000 as a result of emission reductions in Denmark as well as in Europe. The emission reductions have been obtained via regulation on EU as well as national level, improved technology, substitution of harmful substances, transition to cleaner energy sources (wind, solar and geothermal) etc. However, the above figures illustrate that there are still severe impacts of air pollution exposures even in Denmark. This is the background for the Strategic Growth Area (SGA) on “Atmospheric Pollution and Impact on Human Health”.

About 20% of the Danish population suffers from hay fever which is today known to be directly linked to asthma. Airborne allergens include pollen and fungal spores are currently monitored using technology developed in the 1950s and 1960s. There are currently only two monitoring stations in Denmark, and studies have demonstrated that two monitoring stations are not sufficient to describe the variability in airborne allergen loadings.

SGA for Atmospheric Pollution and Impact on Human Health

The overall research goal of the SGA for Atmospheric Pollution and Human Health is to provide new knowledge that can contribute to fill a substantial knowledge gap on human health effects related to airborne particle pollution. The SGA makes use of state-of-the-art tools for measuring and modelling human exposure to air pollution and combines these with registry data on health effects. The modelling tools are applied for mapping health effects and linking these to socio-economic costs for the society.

The Danish research community is in a unique position worldwide to address the challenge of how to solve the air pollution problem in an optimal way. The key issue is that we still don’t know exactly what kind of atmospheric particles and what gases are most harmful to human health and which are less harmful. This is knowledge necessary for optimal regulation of air pollution sources.

Denmark is the only country in the world where a civil registry (CPR registry) started in the early 1970ties. Together with the unique Danish registers for mortality and morbidity that places the Danish research community in a particularly good position to address the challenge and find solutions, especially when it is further combined with the very strong ongoing research in air pollution monitoring, atmospheric processes and integrated air pollution modelling at all scale from the Northern Hemisphere and down to address level for all addresses in Denmark,

Research areas

Air pollution consists of thousands of gases and airborne particles with a variety of physical and chemical properties and a wide range of different sources. Air pollution is the result of local emissions as well as contributions from pollution transported by the wind from sources in other parts of Denmark, but also abroad. Simultaneously, chemical transformation and mixing with surrounding air play a crucial role. Airborne particle have highly varying sizes, shapes and chemical compositions. Some particles are directly emitted, whereas others are the result of chemical transformation of gaseous pollutants. In both cases they may be the result of natural and anthropogenic sources. In particle research it is common to divide particles into size fractions of which ultrafine particles (particles with a diameter below 0,1 µm and determined in number concentrations, and fine fraction particles (particles with a diameter below 2,5 µm and measured in mass concentrations) are considered as the most important. A number of studies in Denmark and word-wide have demonstrated a relationship to health effects for fine fraction particles, whereas results for ultrafine particles are less conclusive. It is still unclear whether fine fraction particles are carriers of harmful substances or they are harmful irrespective of their composition.

Current monitoring on airborne allergens is based on collection on filters and manual counting of pollen grains and fungal spores; techniques developed in the 1950s and 1960s. Modern technology should allow detection of allergen content, use of DNA technologies and in turn application of transport-dispersion models to map better airborne allergen loadings. However, new technology has not yet been used to its full potential. There is a need for studies targeted towards specific sources like e.g. fungal spores released from crops during harvesting.

There is a strong need for more knowledge on health effects of airborne particles. Different sources emit different types of particles. Direct emissions of particles (referred to as "primary particles") from power plants, industry, domestic wood stoves and road traffic as well as natural emissions from i.e. sea spray and dessert dust may have very different composition. Such primary particles furthermore differ from secondary particles formed from gaseous pollutants in chemical reactions in the atmosphere. Soot from road traffic and wood stoves seems to be more hazardous than other particles, but current knowledge does not indicate that any fine fraction airborne particles are without health effects. There may thus be reasons to focus regulation more towards soot particles than other particles. Research needs are mainly within three areas:

  • Increase the understanding of sources, atmospheric transport and chemical conversion, chemical composition and size distribution of airborne particles including processes controlling the formation of secondary carbon containing particles.
  • Increase the understanding of the relationship between health effects and the particles chemical composition and size distribution
  • Increase knowledge on the impact of airborne allergens on asthma and other allergic illnesses. Revolutionize monitoring of airborne allergens (mainly pollen and fungal spores) and bring this up to similar standard as air pollution monitoring.

Examples of recent and ongoing projects

  • Health Effects Institute (HEI) project "ELAPSE" on health effects of air pollution exposure at low loading: Mortality and morbidity effects of long-term exposure to low-level PM2.5, Black Carbon, NO2 and O3: an analysis of European cohorts. Abstract at HEI web site 
  • NordForsk project NordicWelfAir http://nordicwelfair.au.dk  | Press release (Danish)
  • Health Effects Institute (HEI) project "HERMES" on exposure to several pollutants (including particle number as new pollutant) and transportation noise and evaluate the roles of socioeconomic status, green space, physical activity, diet, and stress. Abstract at HEI web site 
  • Health Effects Institute (HEI) project on "Impact of Exposure to Air Pollution on Asthma: a Multi-Exposure Assessment". Abstract at HEI web site
  • Big Data Centre for Environment and Health (BERTHA), funded by the Novo Nordisk Foundation, is a cross-disciplinary research centre focusing on individual level life course environmental and social influences and human health. Link to the BERTHA website: http://bertha.au.dk/
  • DCE project on Health effects and external costs from air pollution in Denmark over 25 years. Excerpt from project description (in Danish, opens in new window).
  • Establishment of interdisciplinary network air pollution and Health at Aarhus University. Excerpt from project description (opens in new window).
  • DCE project WOODMAD on pollution from wood stoves.
  • PhD project on health effects related fungal spores
  • PhD project on health effects of pollen and ozone combination
  • DCE project on allergen exposure with focus on identification of fungal spores
  • AUFF project on air-pollution and drinking water - a population-based cohort study of environmental risk factors for ADHD

See also: Our comprehensive set of web pages on air pollution (measurements, modelling, emission inventories etc.)

Publications

 Atmospheric Pollution and Impacts on Human Health - publications within the research area.

Click to expand publications list

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Atmospheric Pollution and Impacts on Human Health - persons involved

Mikael Skou Andersen , Professor , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Miljøvidenskab, Samfundsvidenskabelig og geografisk miljøforskning, Aarhus
Rossana Bossi , Seniorforsker , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske målinger
Jørgen Brandt , Professor , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske Emissioner og Modellering
Jesper Heile Christensen , Seniorforsker , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske Emissioner og Modellering
Rikke Dalgaard , Centermanager , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Samfundsvidenskabelig og geografisk miljøforskning
Thomas Ellermann , ENVS-kvalitetskoordinator, seniorforsker , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske målinger
Patrik Fauser , Seniorforsker , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Environmental chemistry & toxicology
Camilla Geels , Seniorforsker , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske Emissioner og Modellering
Ulrich Bay Gosewinkel , Seniorforsker , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Mikrobiel Økologi
Steen Gyldenkærne , Seniorforsker , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske Emissioner og Modellering
Kaj Mantzius Hansen , Seniorforsker , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske Emissioner og Modellering
Niels Bohse Hendriksen , Seniorforsker , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Mikrobiel Økologi
Ole Hertel , Prodekan , Dekanat, Technical Sciences
Ulas Im , Seniorforsker , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske Emissioner og Modellering
Anne Jensen , Seniorforsker , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Samfundsvidenskabelig og geografisk miljøforskning
Steen Solvang Jensen , Seniorforsker - sektionsleder , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske Emissioner og Modellering
Matthias Ketzel , Professor , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske Emissioner og Modellering
Jibran Khan , Adjunkt , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske Emissioner og Modellering
Anne Sofie Lansø , Seniorforsker , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske Emissioner og Modellering
Gregor Levin , Seniorrådgiver , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Samfundsvidenskabelig og geografisk miljøforskning
Andreas Massling , Professor , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske målinger
Ole-Kenneth Nielsen , Chefkonsulent , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske Emissioner og Modellering
Claus Nordstrøm , Specialkonsulent , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske målinger
Pia Viuf Ørby , Adjunkt , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske målinger
Marlene Schmidt Plejdrup , Specialkonsulent , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske Emissioner og Modellering
Maria Bech Poulsen , Akademisk medarbejder , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske målinger
Hugo Savill Russell , Postdoc , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Mikrobiel Økologi
Clive Eric Sabel , Ekstern VIP , Institut for Folkesundhed - Miljø, Arbejde og Sundhed
Henrik Skov , Professor , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske målinger
Lise Lotte Sørensen , Professor og sektionsleder , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Atmosfæriske målinger
Katrin Vorkamp , Professor , Institut for Miljøvidenskab - Environmental chemistry & toxicology