Same environment, stratified impacts? Air pollution, extreme temperatures, and birth weight in south China

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Tác giả: Jere R Behrman, Emily Hannum, Xiaoying Liu, Fan Wang, Qingguo Zhao

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 915.13 Geography of and travel in Asia

Thông tin xuất bản: 2022

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: Metadata

ID: 194829

 This paper investigates whether associations between birth weight and prenatal ambient environmental conditions--pollution and extreme temperatures--differ by 1) maternal education
  2) children's innate health
  and 3) interactions between these two. We link birth records from Guangzhou, China, during a period of high pollution, to ambient air pollution (PM10 and a composite measure) and extreme temperature data. We first use mean regressions to test whether, overall, maternal education is an "effect modifier" in the relationships between ambient air pollution, extreme temperature, and birth weight. We then use conditional quantile regressions to test for effect heterogeneity according to the unobserved innate vulnerability of babies after conditioning on other confounders. Results show that 1) the negative association between ambient exposures and birth weight is twice as large at lower conditional quantiles of birth weights as at the median
  2) the protection associated with college-educated mothers with respect to pollution and extreme heat is heterogeneous and potentially substantial: between 0.02 and 0.34 standard deviations of birth weights, depending on the conditional quantiles
  3) this protection is amplified under more extreme ambient conditions and for infants with greater unobserved innate vulnerabilities.
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