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. 2019 Apr 16;30(4):650–658. doi: 10.1038/s41370-019-0135-4

Table 2.

Mortality RRs (95% CI) associated with a 10 ppb increase in O3: single pollutant and PM2.5-adjusted models

Cause of death Single pollutant modela PM2.5-adjusted modelb
All-cause 1.013 (1.012–1.014) 1.004 (1.003–1.006)
  Accidental 0.998 (0.991–1.006) 1.010 (1.002–1.017)
All cardiovascular 1.027 (1.025–1.028) 1.005 (1.003–1.007)
  IHD 1.043 (1.041–1.045) 1.008 (1.006–1.011)
  CBV 1.012 (1.008–1.016) 0.993 (0.989–0.997)
  CHF 1.052 (1.045–1.060) 1.063 (1.055–1.071)
All respiratory 1.036 (1.032–1.039) 1.030 (1.027–1.034)
  COPD 1.065 (1.060–1.069) 1.072 (1.067–1.077)
  Pneumonia 1.024 (1.018–1.030) 0.990 (0.984–0.996)
All cancer 1.000 (0.998–1.003) 0.995 (0.993–0.998)
  Lung cancer 1.016 (1.011–1.020) 1.015 (1.010–1.020)

Time period: 2000–2008, USA

RR risk ratio, CI confidence interval, PM2.5 particles with aerodynamic diameters <2.5 μm, IHD ischemic heart disease, CBV cerebrovascular disease, CHF congestive heart failure, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Risk ratios are age, gender and race stratified, and adjusted for state of residence

aWarm-season average of daily 1-h maximum ozone concentrations

bModels adjusted for 1-year moving average PM2.5 exposures