Increased risk of pneumonia amongst residents living near goat farms in different livestock-dense regions in the Netherlands

Publication date

2023-07-05

Authors

Lotterman, AniekISNI 0000000492495302
Baliatsas, ChristosISNI 0000000419456868
de Rooij, Myrna Maria TheresiaORCID 0000-0002-6560-4839ISNI 0000000492511712
Huss, AnkeORCID 0000-0001-9268-1867ISNI 0000000396358527
Jacobs, JoséISNI 0000000419447355
Dückers, Michel
Boender, Gert Jan
McCarthy, Catherine
Heederik, DickISNI 0000000388327640
Hagenaars, Thomas J

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previous studies, performed between 2009-2019, in the Netherlands observed an until now still unexplained increased risk for pneumonia among residents living close to goat farms. Since data were collected in the provinces Noord-Brabant and Limburg (NB-L), an area with relatively high air pollution levels and proximity to large industrial areas in Europe, the question remains whether the results are generalizable to other regions. In this study, a different region, covering the provinces Utrecht, Gelderland, and Overijssel (UGO) with a similar density of goat farms, was included to assess whether the association between goat farm proximity and pneumonia is consistently observed across the Netherlands. METHODS: Data for this study were derived from the Electronic Health Records (EHR) of 21 rural general practices (GPs) in UGO, for 2014-2017. Multi-level analyses were used to compare annual pneumonia prevalence between UGO and data derived from rural reference practices ('control area'). Random-effects meta-analysis (per GP practice) and kernel analyses were performed to study associations of pneumonia with the distance between goat farms and patients' home addresses. RESULTS: GP diagnoses of pneumonia occurred 40% more often in UGO compared to the control area. Meta-analysis showed an association at a distance of less than 500m (~70% more pneumonia compared to >500m) and 1000m (~20% more pneumonia compared to >1000m). The kernel-analysis for three of the four individual years showed an increased risk up to a distance of one or two kilometers (2-36% more pneumonia; 10-50 avoidable cases per 100,000 inhabitants per year). CONCLUSIONS: The positive association between living in the proximity of goat farms and pneumonia in UGO is similar to the previously found association in NB-L. Therefore, we concluded that the observed associations are relevant for regions with goat farms in the entire country.

Keywords

Air-pollution, Health, Q-fever, General, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Lotterman, A, Baliatsas, C, de Rooij, M M T, Huss, A, Jacobs, J, Dückers, M, Boender, G J, McCarthy, C, Heederik, D, Hagenaars, T J, Yzermans, C J & Smit, L A M 2023, 'Increased risk of pneumonia amongst residents living near goat farms in different livestock-dense regions in the Netherlands', PLoS One, vol. 18, no. 7, e0286972. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0286972