A Review of Ambient Air Pollution Exposure Assessment Methods in Determining Childhood Respiratory Health Effects in Children under Five
Round 1
Reviewer 1 Report
As a reviewer I have the following remarks. I am using “you” as Dear Authors.
- “Quantification of exposure using robust exposure assessment methods is an important component to understanding the dose-response effects of air pollutant exposure on lung function and respiratory health outcomes.” – the sentence very complex, and for me lack of the word “concentration”.
- “demonstrated low dose effects” – we don’t know dose, rather concertation.
- “Specifically, exposure to nitrogen dioxides…” – I think also ozone.
- “while considering the time varying effects of critical windows of exposure.” – for me it’s not clear, time is related to exposure or effect – develop health condition.
- On searching, why not ozone and urban air pollution?
- Line 47 – no any fixed monitors measurements?
- Line 60 - mean (SD), better to say “mean (standard deviation)” as later SD is not used. At least in the first use should be full spelled. Also cubic meters (m^3, now it is m3).
- Line 144: “the use of LUR model” should be the use of Land Use regression (LUR) model.
- Line 154: British Columbia, Canada, study,,,
- Table 1: 25.50 (17.40 – 31.66)* this interval is reported as IQR?, IQR is just one value (no interval). The IQR is the difference between Q3 and Q1.
- Lag windows of 1-10 – what’s this?
- PM (μg/m3): - which pm?. Table 1.
- I think in some places/context should be used the term “concentration”. In reality we don’t know the dose.
Thank you
Author Response
Please see the attachment.
Author Response File: Author Response.pdf
Reviewer 2 Report
I think the presented study is very useful because it shows us different methods of air pollution exposure assessment used in different studies.
I have few comments regarding the method used to select the studies in this review.
-The authors limited the pollutant to particles and nitrogen dioxide. Ozone is also a pollutant linked to respiratory problems. Why wasn't it included? Authors may add an explanation. I'm not suggesting doing any extra work, only explaining the restrictions.
- Along the same line, some indoor pollutants, such as mold and formaldehyde, are also linked to respiratory problems. I understand that these pollutants are difficult to measure, but they must be mentioned as important causes.
Line 49-50 – “…early infancy (n=5) and early childhood (n=6).” – Please explain the difference between the two groups.
Author Response
Please see the attachment.
Author Response File: Author Response.pdf
Reviewer 3 Report
Dear Authors,
Please consider the following comments and suggestions.
-Although the focus of the review is on the air pollution exposure assessment methods, a brief description of the main results of the cited works is sometimes missing in the text and should be added;
-DOI must be added in all references;
-In section 4.Results, line 40: Table 1 refers 13 papers (not 17). Please complete Table 1 with the 17 mentioned references;
-Line 82: "The use of two monitoring stations to describe exposure among the full cohort of urban and rural resident participants is likely to have resulted in exposure assessment errors." Please explain;
-Line 86: typo (remove ",");
-Line 136: "The primary difference between the British Columbia and China studies is the former determined IDW estimates based on proximity to industrial point sources and roadways"...
-Line 173: typo (remove ".");
-The Conclusions section should not include references. References 50 and 51 should be included in an earlier stage of the paper.
-Line 5 of Conclusions: typo ("." should be ",")
Author Response
Please see the attachment.
Author Response File: Author Response.pdf