The conference will be LIVE at UDAQ this year (a streaming option will be available).
7th Annual conference: Thursday,
March 30, 2023
Registration deadline: March 20, 2023.
Abstract
deadline: February 27, 2023.
Conference Schedule
You can download the 2023 Conference Flyer.
The 2020 conference oral presentations are available for viewing on YouTube.
Special 2020 Plenary Speaker:
Dr. Arden Pope.
C. Arden Pope, III is the Mary Lou Fulton Professor of Economics at Brigham Young University. He has a PhD from Iowa State University (1981) and was a Fellow at the Harvard School of Public Health (1992/93). He has conducted or collaborated on seminal studies on health effects of air pollution and has authored or coauthored 200+ research including articles in New England Journal of Medicine, JAMA, Lancet, PNAS, AJRCCM, and Circulation. He is one of the world’s most cited and recognized experts on health effects of air pollution (Web of Science/Clarivate Analytics, Highly Cited Researcher; 100,000+ Google Scholar citations). He has served on or chaired various scientific advisory and oversight boards and committees (including U.S. EPA Science Advisory Board and Chair of the U.S. EPA Advisory Council on Clean Air Compliance Analysis). He has also been a recipient of multiple research and teaching awards (including Utah Governor’s Medal for Science & Technology; BYU’s Karl G. Maeser Distinguished Faculty Lecturer; American Association for Aerosol Research and International Society for Aerosols in Medicine’s Thomas T. Mercer Joint Prize; Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters, Gardner Prize; and American College of Chest Physicians, Honorary Fellow Award).
Plenary Abstract:
Almost unbelievably, it is estimated that air pollution is a top ten risk factor contributing to global burden of disease. Epidemiological and related studies indicate that short-term exposure to air pollution exacerbates existing cardiovascular and pulmonary disease and increases the risk of becoming symptomatic, requiring medical attention, or even dying. Large prospective cohort studies have provided evidence that long-term repeated exposure to air pollution, especially fine particulate matter is associated with increased risk of chronic pulmonary and cardiovascular disease and death. Extrapolation of the epidemiological evidence across the global population results in estimates of approximately 3 to 7 million deaths attributed to exposure to air pollution. Given the staggering estimated health costs and the related public policy challenges, it is important, even imperative, that we understand the quantity, quality, and limitations of the evidence. This presentation will review evidence from the prospective cohort studies and evaluate its consistency, coherency, and plausibility.
2019 Conference flier
2018 Conference flier
Utah Division of Air Quality, Salt Lake City, UT, Cate Youatt (Overall Coordinator)
Brigham Young University, Provo, UT, Jaron Hansen (Provo region representative)
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, Kerry Kelly (Salt Lake Valley region representative)
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, Judy Ou (Salt Lake Valley region representative, Air Quality Health)
Utah State University, Logan, UT, Randy Martin (Logan region representative)
Utah State University, Vernal, UT, Seth Lyman (Uintah Basin region representative, poster session and awards, 2021 Committee Chair)
Weber State University, Ogden, UT, John Sohl (Northern Wasatch representative, Webmaster, registrations, abstracts)
Utah Division of Air Quality, Salt Lake City, UT, Chris Pennell
Utah Division of Air Quality, Salt Lake City, UT, Lexie Wilson