Project description
Turning air quality predictions into health forecasts
Air pollution is a global health crisis, with 99 % of the world’s population living in areas failing to meet international air quality guidelines. It results in 4.2 million premature deaths annually, with half a million occurring in Europe alone. Current air quality warning systems rely on location-specific pollutant thresholds, without the capacity to consider vulnerable populations. In this context, the European Research Council-funded FORECAST-AIR project will integrate air quality forecasts, environmental epidemiology and vulnerability disparities. It will also offer a new method for issuing public health alerts. The project employs epidemiological models to convert air quality predictions into health forecasts, assesses predictability, and aims to create early warning systems that prioritise the well-being of vulnerable groups.
Objective
Air pollution represents a major global environmental health problem. 99% of the world population lives in locations where international air quality guidelines are not met. Overall, ambient air pollution causes 4.2 million premature deaths every year worldwide, half a million of which in Europe alone. Available early warning systems of air quality are generally based on location-specific thresholds of air pollutant concentrations, they are entirely based only on forecasts representing the physical processes of atmospheric chemistry, and they do not account for the inequalities in vulnerability of the exposed populations. The ERC-funded project FORECAST-AIR will go beyond these limitations in health early warning systems by integrating air quality forecasting, environmental epidemiology and the inequalities in vulnerability to implement a new method to issue public health alerts. Towards this aim, I will estimate epidemiological models between air pollution observations and health records disaggregated by causes of disease and sociodemographic vulnerable groups; I will use these models to transform bias-corrected air quality forecasts into heath predictions; I will analyse and compare the window of predictability of forecasts and predictions; and I will use this comparative study to assess the predictability of the resulting health early warning systems, so that they generate trust among public health authorities and end-users. If successful, FORECAST-AIR will drive innovation by creating operational, fit-for-purpose, early warning systems representing the health impacts of several air pollutants, with a special focus on vulnerable populations.
Fields of science
Keywords
Programme(s)
- HORIZON.1.1 - European Research Council (ERC) Main Programme
Funding Scheme
HORIZON-ERC-POC - HORIZON ERC Proof of Concept GrantsHost institution
08036 Barcelona
Spain