Your Air Pollution Makes Me Sick! Estimating the Spatial Spillover Effects of PM2.5 Emissions on Emergency Room Visits Due to Respiratory Diseases in Chile

Sarrias M.; Molina-Varas A.

Keywords: Air pollution; PM2.5 emissions; Public healthInstrumental variable; Spatial panel models; Spatial spillover effect

Abstract

This study quantifies the spillover effects of PM2.5 emissions on emergency room visits due to respiratory diseases in Chile. We use several spatial panel methods and models controlling also for the potential endogeneity of air quality. Our estimates show that the spillover effects are downward biased when this endogeneity is ignored. Furthermore, using the estimates from our preferred model, we find that about 65 per cent of the total emergency room visits in Chile are due to PM2.5 emissions generated in the same municipality, whereas the remaining 35 per cent can be attributed to pollutants emitted in a different spatial unit. In economic terms, increasing PM2.5 emissions in one thousand tonnes yields to an increase of USD 98,010 of annual costs for ER health facilities due to spillover effects, whereas the total costs (considering indirect and direct effects) amounts to USD 283,855.

Más información

Título según SCOPUS: Your Air Pollution Makes Me Sick! Estimating the Spatial Spillover Effects of PM2.5 Emissions on Emergency Room Visits Due to Respiratory Diseases in Chile
Título de la Revista: Region
Volumen: 9
Número: 2
Editorial: European Regional Science Association
Fecha de publicación: 2022
Página final: 23
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.18335/region.v9i2.399

Notas: SCOPUS