Associations between environmental quality and adult asthma prevalence in medical claims data.

Associations between environmental quality and adult asthma prevalence in medical claims data. Environ Res. 2018 Jun 26;166:529-536 Authors: Gray CL, Lobdell DT, Rappazzo KM, Jian Y, Jagai JS, Messer LC, Patel AP, DeFlorio-Barker SA, Lyttle C, Solway J, Rzhetsky A Abstract As of 2014, approximately 7.4% of U.S. adults had current asthma. The etiology of asthma is complex, involving genetics, behavior, and environmental factors. To explore the association between cumulative environmental quality and asthma prevalence in U.S. adults, we linked the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Environmental Quality Index (EQI) to the MarketScan® Commercial Claims and Encounters Database. The EQI is a summary measure of five environmental domains (air, water, land, built, sociodemographic). We defined asthma as having at least 2 claims during the study period, 2003-2013. We used a Bayesian approach with non-informative priors, implementing mixed-effects regression modeling with a Poisson link function. Fixed effects variables were EQI, sex, race, and age. Random effects were counties. We modeled quintiles of the EQI comparing higher quintiles (worse quality) to lowest quintile (best quality) to estimate prevalence ratios (PR) and credible intervals (CIs). We estimated associations using the cumulative EQI and domain-specific EQIs; we assessed U.S. overall (non-stratified) as well as stratified by rural-urban continuum codes (RUCC) to assess ru...
Source: Environmental Research - Category: Environmental Health Authors: Tags: Environ Res Source Type: research