Mortality rate attributed to household and ambient air pollution, age-standardized (per 100,000 population) - Country Ranking - Europe

Definition: Mortality rate attributed to household and ambient air pollution is the number of deaths attributable to the joint effects of household and ambient air pollution in a year per 100,000 population. The rates are age-standardized. Following diseases are taken into account: acute respiratory infections (estimated for all ages); cerebrovascular diseases in adults (estimated above 25 years); ischaemic heart diseases in adults (estimated above 25 years); chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in adults (estimated above 25 years); and lung cancer in adults (estimated above 25 years).

Source: World Health Organization, Global Health Observatory Data Repository (http://apps.who.int/ghodata/).

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 North Macedonia 82.20 2016
2 Bosnia and Herzegovina 79.80 2016
3 Montenegro 78.60 2016
4 Moldova 78.30 2016
5 Ukraine 70.70 2016
6 Albania 68.00 2016
7 Serbia 62.50 2016
8 Bulgaria 61.80 2016
9 Belarus 60.70 2016
10 Romania 59.30 2016
11 Turkey 46.60 2016
12 Latvia 41.30 2016
13 Hungary 38.80 2016
14 Poland 37.90 2016
15 Croatia 35.50 2016
16 Lithuania 34.00 2016
17 Slovak Republic 33.50 2016
18 Czech Republic 29.60 2016
19 Greece 27.60 2016
20 Estonia 25.00 2016
21 Slovenia 22.60 2016
22 Malta 20.20 2016
23 Cyprus 20.10 2016
24 Germany 16.00 2016
25 Belgium 15.70 2016
26 Austria 15.30 2016
27 Italy 15.00 2016
28 United Kingdom 13.80 2016
29 Netherlands 13.70 2016
30 Denmark 13.20 2016
31 Ireland 11.90 2016
32 Luxembourg 11.60 2016
33 Switzerland 10.10 2016
34 Spain 9.90 2016
35 Portugal 9.80 2016
36 France 9.70 2016
37 Iceland 8.70 2016
38 Norway 8.60 2016
39 Sweden 7.20 2016
39 Finland 7.20 2016

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Development Relevance: Air pollution is one of the biggest environmental risks to health. According to the World Health Organization, the combined effects of ambient (outdoor) and household air pollution cause about 7 million premature deaths every year. Most deaths occur due to increased mortality from stroke, heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, lung cancer and acute respiratory infections. The majority of the burden is borne by populations in low and middle income countries.

Limitations and Exceptions: Estimates of the joint effects of air pollution are constrained by limited knowledge on the distribution of the population exposed to both household and ambient air pollution, correlation of exposures at individual level as household air pollution is a contributor to ambient air pollution, and non-linear interactions

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual