Spatial modelling and inequalities of environmental noise in Accra, Ghana
2022
Clark, Sierra N. | Alli, Abosede S. | Ezzati, Majid | Bräuer, Michael | Toledano, Mireille B. | Nimo, James | Moses, Josephine Bedford | Baah, Solomon | Hughes, Allison | Cavanaugh, Alicia | Agyei-Mensah, Samuel | Owusu, George | Robinson, Brian | Baumgartner, Jill | Bennett, James E. | Arku, Raphael E.
Noise pollution is a growing environmental health concern in rapidly urbanizing sub-Saharan African (SSA) cities. However, limited city-wide data constitutes a major barrier to investigating health impacts as well as implementing environmental policy in this growing population. As such, in this first of its kind study in West Africa, we measured, modelled and predicted environmental noise across the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area (GAMA) in Ghana, and evaluated inequalities in exposures by socioeconomic factors. Specifically, we measured environmental noise at 146 locations with weekly (n = 136 locations) and yearlong monitoring (n = 10 locations). We combined these data with geospatial and meteorological predictor variables to develop high-resolution land use regression (LUR) models to predict annual average noise levels (LAeq₂₄ₕᵣ, Ldₑₙ, Ldₐy, Lₙᵢgₕₜ). The final LUR models were selected with a forward stepwise procedure and performance was evaluated with cross-validation. We spatially joined model predictions with national census data to estimate population levels of, and potential socioeconomic inequalities in, noise levels at the census enumeration-area level. Variables representing road-traffic and vegetation explained the most variation in noise levels at each site. Predicted day-evening-night (Ldₑₙ) noise levels were highest in the city-center (Accra Metropolis) (median: 64.0 dBA) and near major roads (median: 68.5 dBA). In the Accra Metropolis, almost the entire population lived in areas where predicted Ldₑₙ and night-time noise (Lₙᵢgₕₜ) surpassed World Health Organization guidelines for road-traffic noise (Ldₑₙ <53; and Lₙᵢgₕₜ <45). The poorest areas in Accra also had significantly higher median Ldₑₙ and Lₙᵢgₕₜ compared with the wealthiest ones, with a difference of ∼5 dBA. The models can support environmental epidemiological studies, burden of disease assessments, and policies and interventions that address underlying causes of noise exposure inequalities within Accra.
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