Abstract
BACKGROUND
Previous studies suggest a relationship between air pollutants, aeroallergens, and asthma exacerbations.
OBJECTIVE
To simultaneously examine the role of seasonality, air quality, aeroallergens, and climate on asthma-related pediatric emergency department (ED) visits.
METHODS
A retrospective 4-year study of asthma-related ED visits was conducted.
RESULTS
September had the highest number of visits (p < 0.01). There were lower temperatures and precipitation (p < 0.01) and higher tree and weed pollen levels (p = 0.05) on days with more visits (p = 0.05), while grass pollen, mold, ozone, NO2, and PM2.5 levels showed no significant differences.
CONCLUSIONS
Asthma-related visits were associated with aeroallergens and climatic factors and not air-quality factors.
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