Lucy Neal
Met Office
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Publication
Featured researches published by Lucy Neal.
Environmental Health | 2017
Francesca Pannullo; Duncan Lee; Lucy Neal; Mohit Dalvi; Paul Agnew; Fiona M. O’Connor; Sabyasachi Mukhopadhyay; Sujit K. Sahu; Christophe Sarran
BackgroundEstimating the long-term health impact of air pollution in a spatio-temporal ecological study requires representative concentrations of air pollutants to be constructed for each geographical unit and time period. Averaging concentrations in space and time is commonly carried out, but little is known about how robust the estimated health effects are to different aggregation functions. A second under researched question is what impact air pollution is likely to have in the future.MethodsWe conducted a study for England between 2007 and 2011, investigating the relationship between respiratory hospital admissions and different pollutants: nitrogen dioxide (NO2); ozone (O3); particulate matter, the latter including particles with an aerodynamic diameter less than 2.5 micrometers (PM2.5), and less than 10 micrometers (PM10); and sulphur dioxide (SO2). Bayesian Poisson regression models accounting for localised spatio-temporal autocorrelation were used to estimate the relative risks (RRs) of pollution on disease risk, and for each pollutant four representative concentrations were constructed using combinations of spatial and temporal averages and maximums. The estimated RRs were then used to make projections of the numbers of likely respiratory hospital admissions in the 2050s attributable to air pollution, based on emission projections from a number of Representative Concentration Pathways (RCP).ResultsNO2 exhibited the largest association with respiratory hospital admissions out of the pollutants considered, with estimated increased risks of between 0.9 and 1.6% for a one standard deviation increase in concentrations. In the future the projected numbers of respiratory hospital admissions attributable to NO2 in the 2050s are lower than present day rates under 3 Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs): 2.6, 6.0, and 8.5, which is due to projected reductions in future NO2 emissions and concentrations.ConclusionsNO2 concentrations exhibit consistent substantial present-day health effects regardless of how a representative concentration is constructed in space and time. Thus as concentrations are predicted to remain above limits set by European Union Legislation until the 2030s in parts of urban England, it will remain a substantial health risk for some time.
Environment International | 2016
Helen Macintyre; Clare Heaviside; Lucy Neal; Paul Agnew; John Thornes; Sotiris Vardoulakis
Exposure to particulate air pollution is known to have negative impacts on human health. Long-term exposure to anthropogenic particulate matter is associated with the equivalent of around 29,000 deaths a year in the UK. However, short-lived air pollution episodes on the order of a few days are also associated with increased daily mortality and emergency hospital admissions for respiratory and cardiovascular conditions. The UK experienced widespread high levels of particulate air pollution in March-April 2014; observations of hourly mean PM2.5 concentrations reached up to 83μgm-3 at urban background sites. We performed an exposure and health impact assessment of the spring air pollution, focusing on two episodes with the highest concentrations of PM2.5 (12-14 March and 28 March-3 April 2014). Across these two episodes of elevated air pollution, totalling 10days, around 600 deaths were brought forward from short-term exposure to PM2.5, representing 3.9% of total all-cause (excluding external) mortality during these days. Using observed levels of PM2.5 from other years, we estimate that this is 2.0 to 2.7 times the mortality burden associated with typical urban background levels of PM2.5 at this time of year. Our results highlight the potential public health impacts and may aid planning for health care resources when such an episode is forecast.
Environment International | 2018
John Gulliver; Paul Elliott; John Henderson; Anna Hansell; Danielle Vienneau; Yutong Cai; Adrienne McCrea; Kevin Garwood; Andy Boyd; Lucy Neal; Paul Agnew; Daniela Fecht; David Briggs; Kees de Hoogh
We established air pollution modelling to study particle (PM10) exposures during pregnancy and infancy (1990–1993) through childhood and adolescence up to age ~15 years (1991–2008) for the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents And Children (ALSPAC) birth cohort. For pregnancy trimesters and infancy (birth to 6 months; 7 to 12 months) we used local (ADMS-Urban) and regional/long-range (NAME-III) air pollution models, with a model constant for local, non-anthropogenic sources. For longer exposure periods (annually and the average of birth to age ~8 and to age ~15 years to coincide with relevant follow-up clinics) we assessed spatial contrasts in local sources of PM10 with a yearly-varying concentration for all background sources. We modelled PM10 (μg/m3) for 36,986 address locations over 19 years and then accounted for changes in address in calculating exposures for different periods: trimesters/infancy (n = 11,929); each year of life to age ~15 (n = 10,383). Intra-subject exposure contrasts were largest between pregnancy trimesters (5th to 95th centile: 24.4–37.3 μg/m3) and mostly related to temporal variability in regional/long-range PM10. PM10 exposures fell on average by 11.6 μg/m3 from first year of life (mean concentration = 31.2 μg/m3) to age ~15 (mean = 19.6 μg/m3), and 5.4 μg/m3 between follow-up clinics (age ~8 to age ~15). Spatial contrasts in 8-year average PM10 exposures (5th to 95th centile) were relatively low: 25.4–30.0 μg/m3 to age ~8 years and 20.7–23.9 μg/m3 from age ~8 to age ~15 years. The contribution of local sources to total PM10 was 18.5%–19.5% during pregnancy and infancy, and 14.4%–17.0% for periods leading up to follow-up clinics. Main roads within the study area contributed on average ~3.0% to total PM10 exposures in all periods; 9.5% of address locations were within 50 m of a main road. Exposure estimates will be used in a number of planned epidemiological studies.
Archive | 2016
Lucy Neal; Marie Tilbee; Paul Agnew
An existing bias correction technique has been extended to intelligently incorporate urban centre and roadside observations by using high (1 km) resolution pollution climatologies. The results show that this can give important improvements in forecast skill, particularly during rush hours where a clear distinction between urban and rural areas becomes more apparent.
Atmospheric Environment | 2015
Ulas Im; Roberto Bianconi; Efisio Solazzo; I. Kioutsioukis; Alba Badia; Alessandra Balzarini; Rocío Baró; Roberto Bellasio; Dominik Brunner; Charles Chemel; Gabriele Curci; Johannes Flemming; Renate Forkel; Lea Giordano; Pedro Jiménez-Guerrero; Marcus Hirtl; Alma Hodzic; Luka Honzak; Oriol Jorba; Christoph Knote; Jeroen Kuenen; Paul A. Makar; Astrid Manders-Groot; Lucy Neal; Juan L. Pérez; Guido Pirovano; George Pouliot; Roberto San José; Nicholas Savage; Wolfram Schröder
Atmospheric Environment | 2015
Ulas Im; Roberto Bianconi; Efisio Solazzo; I. Kioutsioukis; Alba Badia; Alessandra Balzarini; Rocío Baró; Roberto Bellasio; Dominik Brunner; Charles Chemel; Gabriele Curci; Hugo Denier van der Gon; Johannes Flemming; Renate Forkel; Lea Giordano; Pedro Jiménez-Guerrero; Marcus Hirtl; Alma Hodzic; Luka Honzak; Oriol Jorba; Christoph Knote; Paul A. Makar; Astrid Manders-Groot; Lucy Neal; Juan L. Pérez; Guido Pirovano; George Pouliot; Roberto San José; Nicholas Savage; Wolfram Schröder
Atmospheric Environment | 2015
Dominik Brunner; Nicholas Savage; Oriol Jorba; Brian Eder; Lea Giordano; Alba Badia; Alessandra Balzarini; Rocío Baró; Roberto Bianconi; Charles Chemel; Gabriele Curci; Renate Forkel; Pedro Jiménez-Guerrero; Marcus Hirtl; Alma Hodzic; Luka Honzak; Ulas Im; Christoph Knote; Paul A. Makar; Astrid Manders-Groot; Erik van Meijgaard; Lucy Neal; Juan L. Pérez; Guido Pirovano; Roberto San José; Wolfram Schröder; Ranjeet S. Sokhi; Dimiter Syrakov; Alfreida Torian; Paolo Tuccella
Atmospheric Environment | 2015
Lea Giordano; Dominik Brunner; Johannes Flemming; Christian Hogrefe; Ulas Im; Roberto Bianconi; Alba Badia; Alessandra Balzarini; Rocío Baró; Charles Chemel; Gabriele Curci; Renate Forkel; Pedro Jiménez-Guerrero; Marcus Hirtl; Alma Hodzic; Luka Honzak; Oriol Jorba; Christoph Knote; J.J.P. Kuenen; Paul A. Makar; Astrid Manders-Groot; Lucy Neal; J. L. Pérez; Guido Pirovano; George Pouliot; R. San José; Nicholas Savage; Wolfram Schröder; Ranjeet S. Sokhi; Dimiter Syrakov
Atmospheric Environment | 2014
Lucy Neal; Paul Agnew; S. Moseley; C. Ordóñez; Nicholas Savage; Marie Tilbee
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016
I. Kioutsioukis; Ulas Im; Efisio Solazzo; Roberto Bianconi; Alba Badia; Alessandra Balzarini; Rocío Baró; Roberto Bellasio; Dominik Brunner; Charles Chemel; Gabriele Curci; H.D. van der Gon; Johannes Flemming; Renate Forkel; Lea Giordano; Pedro Jiménez-Guerrero; Marcus Hirtl; Oriol Jorba; Astrid Manders-Groot; Lucy Neal; J. L. Pérez; Guido Pirovano; R. San José; Nicholas Savage; Wolfram Schröder; Ranjeet S. Sokhi; Dimiter Syrakov; Paolo Tuccella; Johannes Werhahn; Ralf Wolke
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Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
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