Air Pollution Causal Driver of Chronic Rhinitis Burden, Suggests Research
Written By : Medha Baranwal
Medically Reviewed By : Dr. Kamal Kant Kohli
Published On 2026-03-18 15:30 GMT | Update On 2026-03-18 15:30 GMT
South Korea: A new study has revealed that there is a causal relationship between increased air pollution and a rise in outpatient visits for chronic rhinitis. Beyond mere association, the analysis provides robust evidence that air pollution directly contributes to disease burden, ruling out the influence of common confounding factors.
The findings, published in The Laryngoscope, come from a research team led by Su Hwan Kim from the Department of Information Statistics at Gyeongsang National University, Republic of Korea. While previous investigations have consistently reported links between air pollution and chronic rhinitis, questions have remained about whether pollution truly causes worsening symptoms or whether the observed relationship is influenced by other environmental or behavioral factors.
To address this gap, the researchers applied an instrumental variable (IV) approach, a statistical technique designed to strengthen causal inference. They used thermal inversion — a meteorological phenomenon that traps pollutants near the ground — as an instrument to isolate the independent effect of air pollution on health outcomes. The analysis was based on nationwide data from the National Health Insurance Service covering the period from January 1, 2014, to December 31, 2017.
In total, 81,210,447 outpatient visits for chronic rhinitis were included in the study. The investigators examined the short-term impact of air pollution, measured using the air quality index (AQI), on daily outpatient visits. A two-stage generalized method-of-moments Poisson regression model was employed to estimate the causal effect while minimizing bias from confounders.
Key Findings:
- Increased air quality index (AQI) levels were associated with a significant rise in outpatient visits for chronic rhinitis.
- Significant positive associations were observed on the same day of exposure (lag 0) and on lag days 3, 5, and 6.
- The strongest effect was noted on the day of exposure (lag 0), with a relative risk (RR) of 1.078.
- Adolescents aged 10–19 years were identified as the most vulnerable group.
- This age group showed statistically significant relative risks across all examined lag days, with RRs ranging from 1.039 to 1.161.
- The findings indicate that younger individuals may be particularly sensitive to short-term changes in air pollution levels.
To further validate their methodology, the researchers conducted robustness checks using negative control outcomes and exposures. The consistency of results across these tests reinforced the credibility of the instrumental variable approach and supported a genuine causal link between elevated AQI and increased healthcare utilization for chronic rhinitis.
Overall, the study provides compelling evidence that worsening air quality directly drives an increase in outpatient visits for chronic rhinitis, rather than simply being correlated with it. The findings highlight the public health implications of air pollution and underscore the importance of policies aimed at improving air quality to reduce the burden of chronic respiratory conditions.
Reference:
Kim, S. H., Kim, S. P., Kim, Z., Park, H. W., Kim, J. Y., & Yoon, H. J. Causal Effect of Air Pollution on Outpatient Visits for Chronic Rhinitis. The Laryngoscope. https://doi.org/10.1002/lary.70445
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