"There are very few opportunities to evaluate O3 reduction per se. One study of intra-state migrants showed a beneficial effect on lung function in children who moved to lower PM and O3 areas. A decrease in O3 during the 1996 Olympics was associated with a reduction of asthma admissions. The interpretation of these findings is unclear." More...
Source & ©: WHO Europe
"For short-term exposure, it is clear that the effects increase over multiple hours (e.g., 6–8 hours for respiratory function effects and lung inflammation). Thus, an 8-hour averaging time is preferable to a 1 hour averaging time. The relationship between long term O3 exposure and health effects is not yet sufficiently understood to allow for establishing a long-term guideline." More...
Source & ©: WHO Europe
"The current WHO Air quality guidelines (AQG) (WHO, 2000) for O3 provide a guideline value of 120µg/m3 (60 ppb), based on controlled human exposure studies, for a maximum 8-hour concentration. The AQG also provide two concentration-response tables, one for health effects estimated from controlled human exposure studies and one from epidemiological studies. No guideline for long-term effects was provided. Since the time these guidelines were agreed, there is sufficient [new] evidence for their reconsideration. Issues to be considered are: the averaging time(s) for the short-term guidelines and their associated levels, the [concentration-response] functions used in the tables, the outcomes included in the concentration-response tables, whether a long-term guideline and/or complementary guidelines (e.g. restricting personal activity) should be adopted.
Recent epidemiological studies have strengthened the evidence that there are short-term O3 effects on mortality and respiratory morbidity and provided further information on exposure-response relationships and effect modification. There is new epidemiological evidence on long-term O3 effects and experimental evidence on lung damage and inflammatory responses. There is also new information on the relationship between [ambient concentrations measured by] fixed site ambient monitors and [total] personal exposure, which affects the interpretation of epidemiological results." More...
Source & ©: WHO Europe
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