Absentee and Economic Impact of Low-Level Fine Particulate Matter and Ozone Exposure in K-12 Students
Daniel L. Mendoza (1, 2), Cheryl S. Pirozzi (1), Erik T. Crosman, (3), Theodore G. Liou (1, 4), Yue Zhang (5), Jessica J. Cleeves (6),, Stephen C. Bannister (7), William R.L. Anderegg (8), Robert Paine III (1), ((1) Division of Respiratory, Critical Care, Occupational Pulmonary

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that low-level PM2.5 and ozone pollution are linked to increased school absences among K-12 students, with significant economic and social implications, especially in disadvantaged areas.
Contribution
It provides granular, school-specific evidence of pollution impacts at levels below regulatory standards, highlighting disparities and economic costs.
Findings
Pollution exposure increases school absences even below standards.
Reducing pollution by 50% could save $452,000 annually.
Disadvantaged schools are disproportionately affected.
Abstract
High air pollution levels are associated with school absences. However, low level pollution impact on individual school absences are under-studied. We modelled PM2.5 and ozone concentrations at 36 schools from July 2015 to June 2018 using data from a dense, research grade regulatory sensor network. We determined exposures and daily absences at each school. We used generalized estimating equations model to retrospectively estimate rate ratios for association between outdoor pollutant concentrations and school absences. We estimated lost school revenue, productivity, and family economic burden. PM2.5 and ozone concentrations and absence rates vary across the School District. Pollution exposure were associated with as high a rate ratio of 1.02 absences per ug/m and 1.01 per ppb increase for PM2.5 and ozone, respectively. Significantly, even PM2.5 and ozone exposure below regulatory…
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