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Ai Milojevic

Researcher at University of London

Publications -  46
Citations -  2236

Ai Milojevic is an academic researcher from University of London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Environmental exposure. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 42 publications receiving 1346 citations. Previous affiliations of Ai Milojevic include Shanghai Jiao Tong University & Keio University.

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Ambient Particulate Air Pollution and Daily Mortality in 652 Cities

TL;DR: The data show independent associations between short-term exposure to PM10 and PM2.5 and daily all-cause, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality in more than 600 cities across the globe, and reinforce the evidence of a link between mortality and PM concentration established in regional and local studies.
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Short-term effects of air pollution on a range of cardiovascular events in England and Wales: case-crossover analysis of the MINAP database, hospital admissions and mortality

TL;DR: This study found no clear evidence for pollution effects on STEMIs and stroke, which ultimately represent thrombogenic processes, though it did for pulmonary embolism.
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Association of mortality with high temperatures in a temperate climate: England and Wales

TL;DR: Effects of high daily summer temperatures on mortality in English regions are quite well approximated by threshold-linear models that can be predicted from the region's climate, a pattern well characterised by a linear model with mean summer temperature.
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Short term association between ozone and mortality: global two stage time series study in 406 locations in 20 countries.

Ana M. Vicedo-Cabrera, +54 more
- 10 Feb 2020 - 
TL;DR: Results suggest that ozone related mortality could be potentially reduced under stricter air quality standards, and have relevance for the implementation of efficient clean air interventions and mitigation strategies designed within national and international climate policies.
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Current and future climate- and air pollution-mediated impacts on human health.

TL;DR: Elevated surface ozone concentrations during the 2003 heatwave period led to exceedences of the current UK air quality objective standards, and a coupled climate-chemistry model is able to reproduce these temperature and ozone extremes.