Health effects from PM10 2006 and 2012

Particulate matter 10 micrometres or less in diameter (PM10) in the air comprises solid particles and liquid droplets from both natural and human-made sources. PM10 is of particular concern because of high concentrations in some areas. It can also damage health, with associated effects ranging from respiratory irritation to cancer. This indicator considers PM10 from human-made sources, such as burning wood or coal for home heating or road motor vehicle emissions.

We report on the estimated number of premature deaths, hospitalisations, and restricted activity days for the New Zealand population from exposure to PM10 from human activities.

• Premature deaths are deaths, often preventable, that occur before a person reaches the age they were expected to live to. • Hospitalisations relate to hospitalisations for respiratory and cardiac illnesses (not including cases leading to premature death). • Restricted activity days occur when symptoms are sufficient to limit usual activities such as work or study.

This dataset relates to the "Health effects from exposure to PM10" measure on the Environmental Indicators, Te taiao Aotearoa website.

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Value
Theme
Author Ministry for the Environment
Maintainer Ministry for the Environment
Maintainer Email Ministry for the Environment
Source https://data.mfe.govt.nz/table/52598-health-effects-from-pm10-2006-and-2012/
Source Created 2015-10-15T22:08:07.439826Z
Source Modified 2015-10-16T01:11:53.681382Z
Language English
Spatial
Source Identifier https://data.mfe.govt.nz/table/52598-health-effects-from-pm10-2006-and-2012/
Dataset metadata created 2 February 2020, last updated 3 March 2025