一项以学校为基础的战略,评估经济条件不利的城市社区儿童的环境暴露和相关的健康影响。

K Sexton, I A Greaves, T R Church, J L Adgate, G Ramachandran, R L Tweedie, A Fredrickson, M Geisser, M Sikorski, G Fischer, D Jones, P Ellringer
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引用次数: 28

摘要

学校健康倡议:环境、学习、疾病(SHIELD)研究是一项以学校为基础的关于明尼阿波利斯市经济弱势城市社区儿童环境健康的新调查。本文描述了研究设计,并总结了招募和监测这一历史上未被充分研究的人群的经验教训。SHIELD研究的重点是测量儿童暴露于多种环境压力源[挥发性有机化学品(VOCs)、环境烟草烟雾、过敏原、生物气溶胶、金属、农药、多氯联苯(PCB)、邻苯二甲酸盐]的情况,并探索对呼吸健康(如肺功能)和学习成果(如标准化考试成绩、学习成绩)的相关影响。它涉及密集的暴露监测,包括儿童学校内外和家中的环境测量,儿童佩戴的被动剂量计的个人测量,以及血液和尿液中的生物标记物测量。SHIELD的参与者包括153名“指数”儿童和51名他们的兄弟姐妹,他们在两所相邻的小学就读2-5年级。明尼阿波利斯公立学校(MPS)协助识别、联系、招募和监测这一群体,这一群体传统上很难研究,因为家庭/孩子流动性很强,说多种语言,经常没有电话,忍受经济困难,经常不信任研究人员,并且有一系列非常规的生活方式和生活安排。采用以学校为基础的方法,总体入学(回应)率为56.7%,英语家庭/儿童(41.7%)和非英语家庭/儿童(71.0%)之间的差距很大。大多数儿童在两次监测期间都参与了研究,并表现出可接受程度的遵守研究协议,包括提供血液和尿液样本。结果表明,在这一人群中进行基于概率的暴露研究既可行又负担得起,但提高我们对影响家庭/儿童参与此类研究意愿的因素(例如,文化,经济,心理,社会)的理解也很重要,特别强调开发具有成本效益的招募方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A school-based strategy to assess children's environmental exposures and related health effects in economically disadvantaged urban neighborhoods.

The School Health Initiative: Environment, Learning, Disease (SHIELD) study is a novel school-based investigation of children's environmental health in economically disadvantaged urban neighborhoods of Minneapolis. This article describes the study design and summarizes lessons learned about recruiting and monitoring this historically understudied population. The SHIELD study focused on measuring children's exposures to multiple environmental stressors [volatile organic chemicals (VOCs), environmental tobacco smoke, allergens, bioaerosols, metals, pesticides, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB), phthalates] and exploring related effects on respiratory health (e.g., lung function) and learning outcomes (e.g., standardized test scores, academic achievement). It involved intensive exposure monitoring, including environmental measurements inside and outside the children's schools and inside their homes, personal measurements with passive dosimeters worn by the children, and biological marker measurements in blood and urine. The SHIELD participants comprised a stratified random sample of 153 "index" children and 51 of their siblings enrolled in grades 2-5 at two adjacent elementary schools. The Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS) assisted with identifying, contacting, recruiting, and monitoring this population, which traditionally is difficult to study because families/children are highly mobile, speak a diversity of languages, frequently do not have a telephone, endure economic hardships, often do not trust researchers, and have a spectrum of unconventional lifestyles and living arrangements. Using a school-based approach, the overall SHIELD enrollment (response) rate was 56.7%, with a wide disparity between English-speaking (41.7%) and non-English-speaking (71.0%) families/children. Most children remained involved in the study through both monitoring sessions and exhibited an acceptable degree of compliance with study protocols, including providing blood and urine samples. Results indicate that it is both practical and affordable to conduct probability-based exposure studies in this population, but that it is also important to improve our understanding of factors (e.g., cultural, economic, psychological, social) affecting the willingness of families/children to participate in such studies, with special emphasis on developing cost-effective recruitment methods.

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