Open seminar about how air pollution reduces life satisfaction

Seminar

Date: Wednesday 18 January 2023

Time: 13.30 – 14.30

Location: Lecture room 29, 1st floor in house 4, Campus Albano

Welcome to an open seminar with Mary Abed Al Ahad, University of St Andrews, UK, who will give a talk titled "Air Pollution reduces the individuals’ life satisfaction through health impairment".

Abstract

Purpose:

The impact of air pollution on individuals’ happiness and life satisfaction (LS), and its relationship to other factors became the focus of recent research. Though, the underlying mechanism of how air pollution impacts LS remains unclear. In this study, we examined the direct and indirect effect of air pollution on individuals’ LS through health mediation.

Methods:

We used longitudinal individual-level data from “Understanding-Society: the UK Household-Longitudinal Study” on 59,492 individuals with 347,377 repeated responses across 11years (2009-2019) that was linked to yearly concentrations of NO2, SO2, and particulate-matter (PM10, PM2.5) pollution. Generalized-structural-equation models with multilevel ordered-logistic regression were used to examine the direct effect of air pollution on LS and the indirect effect from health impairment.

Results:

Higher concentrations of NO2 (coefficient=0.009, 95%CI=0.007,0.012, p<0.001), SO2 (coefficient=0.029, 95%CI=0.02,0.037, p<0.001), PM10 (coefficient=0.019, 95%CI=0.013,0.025, p<0.001), and PM2.5 (coefficient=0.025, 95%CI=0.017,0.034, p<0.001) pollutants were associated with poorer health, while poorer health was associated with reduced LS (coefficient=-0.605, 95%CI=-0.614,-0.595, p<0.001). Mediation analysis showed that air pollution impacted individuals’ LS directly and indirectly. The percent of total effect mediated through health was 44.01% for NO2, 78.06% for SO2, 49.82% for PM10, and 44.81% for PM2.5 and the ratio of indirect to direct effect was 0.79 for NO2, 3.56 for SO2, 0.99 for PM10, and 0.81 for PM2.5.  

Conclusion:

Health plays a major mediating role in the relationship between air pollution and LS. To alleviate the impact of air pollution on LS, future strategies should focuson health promotion besides reducing air pollution emissions.

Photo: Alan Law/Mostphotos