Spatiotemporal Patterns of Air Pollutants over the Epidemic Course: A National Study in China
Published version
Peer-reviewed
Repository URI
Repository DOI
Change log
Abstract
Air pollution has been standing as one of the most pressing global challenges. The changing patterns of air pollutants at different spatial and temporal scales have been substantially studied all over the world, which, however, were intricately disturbed by COVID-19 and subsequent containment measures. Understanding fine-scale changing patterns of air pollutants at different stages over the epidemic’s course is necessary for better identifying region-specific drivers of air pollution and preparing for environmental decision making during future epidemics. Taking China as an example, this study developed a multi-output LightGBM approach to estimate monthly concentrations of the six major air pollutants (i.e., PM2.5, PM10, NO2, SO2, O3, and CO) in China and revealed distinct spatiotemporal patterns for each pollutant over the epidemic’s course. The 5-year period of 2019–2023 was selected to observe changes in the concentrations of air pollutants from the pre-COVID-19 era to the lifting of all containment measures. The performance of our model, assessed by cross-validation R2, demonstrated high accuracy with values of 0.92 for PM2.5, 0.95 for PM10, 0.95 for O3, 0.90 for NO2, 0.79 for SO2, and 0.82 for CO. Notably, there was an improvement in the concentrations of particulate matter, particularly for PM2.5, although PM10 exhibited a rebound in northern regions. The concentrations of SO2 and CO consistently declined across the country over the epidemic’s course (p < 0.001 and p < 0.05, respectively), while O3 concentrations in southern regions experienced a notable increase. Concentrations of air pollutants in the Beijing–Tianjin–Hebei region were effectively controlled and mitigated. The findings of this study provide critical insights into changing trends of air quality during public health emergencies, help guide the development of targeted interventions, and inform policy making aimed at reducing disease burdens associated with air pollution.
Description
Peer reviewed: True
Acknowledgements: We would like to thank the editor and anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments and suggestions for improving the manuscript.
Publication status: Published
Funder: International Institute of Spatial Lifecourse Health (ISLE)
Keywords
Journal Title
Conference Name
Journal ISSN
2072-4292
Volume Title
Publisher
Publisher DOI
Rights and licensing
Sponsorship
National Natural Science Foundation of China (42271433, 42101184)
Renmin Hospital of Wuhan University (JCRCYG-2022-003)
Jiangxi Provincial 03 Special Foundation and 5G Program (20224ABC03A05)
Wuhan University Specific Fund for Major School-level Internationalization Initiatives (WHU-GJZDZX-PT07)

