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1.
Environ Res ; 256: 119212, 2024 May 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38797462

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Adverse pregnancy outcomes (APOs) include stillbirth, preterm birth, and low birthweight (LBW). Studies exploring the impact of weather factors and air pollution on APOs are scarce in Nepal. We examined the impacts of prenatal exposure to temperature, precipitation, and air pollution (PM2.5) on APOs among women living in Kavre, Nepal. METHODS: We conducted a hospital and rural health centers-based historical cohort study that included health facility birth records (n = 1716) from the Nepali fiscal year 2017/18 through 2019/20. We linked health records to temperature, precipitation, and PM2.5 data for Kavre for the six months preceding each birth. A random intercept model was used to analyze birthweight, while a composite APO variable, was analyzed using multivariable logistic regression in relation to environmental exposures. RESULTS: The proportion of LBW (<2500 gm), preterm birth (babies born alive before 37 weeks of gestation), and stillbirth was 13%, 4.3%, and 1.5%, respectively, in this study. Overall, around 16% of the study participants had one or more APOs. Total precipitation (ß: 0.17, 95% CI 0.01 to 0.33, p = 0.03) had a positive effect on birthweight in the wetter season. Negative effects for mean maximum (ß: 33.37, 95% CI -56.68 to -10.06, p = 0.005), mean (ß: 32.35, 95% CI -54.44 to -10.27, p = 0.004), and mean minimum temperature (ß: 29.28, 95% CI -49.58 to -8.98, p = 0.005) on birthweight was also observed in the wetter season. CONCLUSION: A positive effect of temperature (mean maximum, mean, and mean minimum) and total precipitation on birthweight was found in the wetter season. This study emphasizes the need for future research using larger cohorts to elucidate these complex relationships in Nepal.

2.
J Urban Health ; 2024 Apr 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38587782

RESUMO

Urban environmental factors such as air quality, heat islands, and access to greenspaces and community amenities impact public health. Some vulnerable populations such as low-income groups, children, older adults, new immigrants, and visible minorities live in areas with fewer beneficial conditions, and therefore, face greater health risks. Planning and advocating for equitable healthy urban environments requires systematic analysis of reliable spatial data to identify where vulnerable populations intersect with positive or negative urban/environmental characteristics. To facilitate this effort in Canada, we developed HealthyPlan.City ( https://healthyplan.city/ ), a freely available web mapping platform for users to visualize the spatial patterns of built environment indicators, vulnerable populations, and environmental inequity within over 125 Canadian cities. This tool helps users identify areas within Canadian cities where relatively higher proportions of vulnerable populations experience lower than average levels of beneficial environmental conditions, which we refer to as Equity priority areas. Using nationally standardized environmental data from satellite imagery and other large geospatial databases and demographic data from the Canadian Census, HealthyPlan.City provides a block-by-block snapshot of environmental inequities in Canadian cities. The tool aims to support urban planners, public health professionals, policy makers, and community organizers to identify neighborhoods where targeted investments and improvements to the local environment would simultaneously help communities address environmental inequities, promote public health, and adapt to climate change. In this paper, we report on the key considerations that informed our approach to developing this tool and describe the current web-based application.

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