scispace - formally typeset
D

Denis Zmirou-Navier

Researcher at EHESP

Publications -  83
Citations -  2363

Denis Zmirou-Navier is an academic researcher from EHESP. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Environmental exposure. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 81 publications receiving 2092 citations. Previous affiliations of Denis Zmirou-Navier include Sorbonne & French Institute of Health and Medical Research.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimating the impact on health of poor reliability of drinking water interventions in developing countries.

TL;DR: Funders of water quality interventions in developing countries should put more effort into auditing whether interventions are sustainable and whether the health benefits are being achieved, as well as investigating what impact poor reliability may have on achieving health improvement targets.
Journal ArticleDOI

Traffic-related air pollution and socioeconomic status: a spatial autocorrelation study to assess environmental equity on a small-area scale.

TL;DR: This study confirms the need to take spatial autocorrelation into account in ecologic studies and shows that failure to do so may lead to biased and unreliable estimates and thus to erroneous conclusions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social inequalities resulting from health risks related to ambient air quality—A European review

TL;DR: The housing market biases land use decisions and may explain why some subgroups suffer from both a low socio-economic status and high exposure to air pollution, and the issue of exposure and health inequalities in relation to ambient air quality is complex and calls for global appraisal.
Journal ArticleDOI

A statistical procedure to create a neighborhood socioeconomic index for health inequalities analysis.

TL;DR: A statistical procedure to create a neighborhood socioeconomic index that can be applied to multiple geographical areas or socioeconomic variables and provides meaningful information to public health bodies is proposed and the importance of the classification method is highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Air quality and social deprivation in four French metropolitan areas—A localized spatio-temporal environmental inequality analysis

TL;DR: It is found that the strength and direction of the association between deprivation and NO2 estimates varied between cities, and there is clear evidence of city-specific spatial and temporal environmental inequalities that relate to the historical socioeconomic make-up of the cities and its evolution.