Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ambient air pollution and noise substantially impact public health and the economy. Different methods to quantify these impacts are described in the literature. OBJECTIVES: Within the European project BEST-COST (Burden of disease-based methods for estimating the socio-economic cost of environmental stressors), we aim to develop an open-source R package to quantify and monetise the disease burden attributable to air pollution and noise, including the impact of social inequalities. METHODS: The developed code will allow for different calculation pathways including: single baseline health data vs. age-specific estimates from life tables; relative and absolute risk; scenario comparison based on the population attributable fraction vs. population impact fraction; single-pollutant vs. correlated exposures; and outdoor vs. indoor air pollution. Moreover, the package can digest a variety of input data formats for the exposure-response function (e.g. relative risk with fixed shape vs. user-defined function) and exposure data (e.g. population-weighted mean vs. categorical distribution, spatial data). Eligible impact metrics will include morbidity incidence and prevalence, number of deaths, years of life lost, and years lived with disability. Finally, the R package will enable quantifying social inequities (using a novel multiple deprivation index) and monetising the attributable disease burden (using a state-of-the-art approach). RESULTS: During development, the R package will be tested in BEST-COST case studies in 5 European countries (BE, EE, FR, NO, PT), compared with existing tools, and discussed with key users in a workshop. The final R package will be available on GitHub in 2026. CONCLUSIONS: This tool will allow the quantification and monetisation of the health impact of air pollution and noise. The R package will be a flexible programming resource that can be used as a standalone or combined with existing tools to build a more solid basis for evidence-based policy making. KEY MESSAGES: • This open-source tool will allow the quantification and monetisation of the health impact of air pollution and noise, including the impact of social inequalities. • The R package will be a flexible programming resource that can be used as a standalone or combined with existing tools to build a more solid basis for evidence-based policy making.