New SoGA 2025 Report

The report covers global air quality and health impacts, including data on noncommunicable diseases.
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Announcements

From actions to results: HEI’s accountability studies

October 31, 2025

Improvements to environmental quality and ultimately to human health have been achieved largely through policies and regulations. Assessing the effectiveness of different environmental improvement actions, such as regulations, policies, interventions, and other planned or unplanned events like the closing of an industrial facility, is key to shaping future decisions. For 23 years, HEI has led efforts to examine actions designed to improve air quality through its accountability research. 

Now accepting abstracts for two annual conference opportunities

October 28, 2025

Submit Your Abstract to Present at HEI's Annual Conference 2026

Note that we are now accepting abstract submissions for poster presentations at our Annual Conference April 26-28, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. The conference is open to all, no prior work with HEI is required to attend and be a part of the HEI community.

HEI publishes new report on assessing long-term air pollution exposures and severe COVID-19 outcomes in New York City

October 9, 2025

HEI has published a new Research Report, REACH-OUT: Race, Ethnicity, and Air Pollution in COVID-19 Hospitalization OUTcomes, led by Dr. Jeanette Stingone of Columbia University. The study evaluated whether associations between long-term air pollution exposures and severe COVID-19 health outcomes varied by neighborhood-level environmental vulnerability, as defined by social and structural characteristics such as income and housing, in a cohort of patients diagnosed with COVID-19 in New York City.

New report on examining mobility in air pollution exposure estimates

October 7, 2025

HEI has published a new Research Report, Accounting for Mobility in Air Pollution Exposure Estimates in Studies on Long-Term Health Effects. This study led by Kees de Hoogh at Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, evaluated whether long-term exposure estimates that account for people’s mobility would improve exposure assessment, using novel agent-based modeling.