2025
Human Health Impacts of Energy Transitions across the United States among Sociodemographic Subpopulations for the Year 2050
Stewart R, Kim H, Choi H, Song Y, Zhang Y, Gillingham K, Esty D, Hobbs B, Bell M. Human Health Impacts of Energy Transitions across the United States among Sociodemographic Subpopulations for the Year 2050. Environmental Science And Technology 2025, 59: 11995-12007. PMID: 40498102, PMCID: PMC12288885, DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.4c14326.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsHuman health impactsConcentration-response functionsAmbient fine particlesImprove air qualityMonetized health benefitsGreenhouse gas emissionsEnvironmental health inequalitiesBaseline incidence ratePollution levelsAir qualityContiguous United StatesFine particlesHealth impactsGas emissionsMitigation strategiesSensitive to assumptionsFossil fuel productionPopulation projectionsFuel productionEconomic benefitsCobenefitsEnergy scenariosPollutionHealth benefitsEnergy transition policies
2008
Ancillary human health benefits of improved air quality resulting from climate change mitigation
Bell ML, Davis DL, Cifuentes LA, Krupnick AJ, Morgenstern RD, Thurston GD. Ancillary human health benefits of improved air quality resulting from climate change mitigation. Environmental Health 2008, 7: 41. PMID: 18671873, PMCID: PMC2519068, DOI: 10.1186/1476-069x-7-41.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAncillary health benefitsAncillary benefitsEconomic valuationRelated research gapsEconomic endpointsClimate change mitigationGHG policiesMitigation policiesAncillary impactsEconomic benefitsBenefit analysisPolicyChange mitigationAdverse health endpointsHealth benefitsStrong evidenceValuationSuch analysesResearch gapBenefitsGHG mitigation strategiesEnvironmental impactsImpactEvidenceFramework
This site is protected by hCaptcha and its Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply