改进炉灶、房屋建筑和儿童所在地对危地马拉少年儿童室内空气污染暴露水平的影响。

Nigel Bruce, John McCracken, Rachel Albalak, Morten A Schei, Kirk R Smith, Victorina Lopez, Chris West
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引用次数: 162

摘要

本研究的目的是评估改良炉灶、房屋通风和儿童所在地对依赖木材燃料的危地马拉农村人口室内空气污染水平和儿童暴露的影响。这项研究是在危地马拉西部高地的一个农村村庄随机抽取204个家庭的18个月以下儿童的样本。通过访谈和观察获得社会经济和家庭信息。使用Gastec扩散管,将24小时一氧化碳(CO)作为所有家庭厨房污染和儿童暴露的主要衡量标准。在一个随机子样本(n=29)中测量了24小时厨房PM(3.5),这些厨房共用CO管。几乎50%的家庭仍然使用明火,大约30%的家庭使用烟囱炉(planchas),主要来自一个大型捐助者资助的项目,其余的家庭使用各种组合,包括瓶装天然气和明火。自购炉灶的家庭24小时厨房CO最低:平均(95% CI) CO为3.09 ppm(1.87-4.30),而明火为12.4 ppm(10.2-14.5)。儿童一氧化碳暴露的排名相同,但比例差异较小(P
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impact of improved stoves, house construction and child location on levels of indoor air pollution exposure in young Guatemalan children.

The goal of this study was to assess the impact of improved stoves, house ventilation, and child location on levels of indoor air pollution and child exposure in a rural Guatemalan population reliant on wood fuel. The study was a random sample of 204 households with children less than 18 months in a rural village in the western highlands of Guatemala. Socio-economic and household information was obtained by interview and observation. Twenty-four hour carbon monoxide (CO) was used as the primary measure of kitchen pollution and child exposure in all homes, using Gastec diffusion tubes. Twenty-four hour kitchen PM(3.5) was measured in a random sub-sample (n=29) of kitchens with co-located CO tubes. Almost 50% of the homes still used open fires, around 30% used chimney stoves (planchas) mostly from a large donor-funded programme, and the remainder of homes used various combinations including bottled gas and open fires. The 24-h kitchen CO was lowest for homes with self-purchased planchas: mean (95% CI) CO of 3.09 ppm (1.87-4.30) vs. 12.4 ppm (10.2-14.5) for open fires. The same ranking was found for child CO exposure, but with proportionately smaller differentials (P<0.0001). The 24-h kitchen PM(3.5) in the sub-sample showed similar differences (n=24, P<0.05). The predicted child PM for all 203 children (based on a regression model from the sub-sample) was 375 microg/m(3) (270-480) for self-purchased planchas and 536 microg/m(3) (488-584) for open fires. Multivariate analysis showed that stove/fuel type was the most important determinant of kitchen CO, with some effect of kitchen volume and eaves. Stove/fuel type was also the key determinant of child CO, with some effect of child position during cooking. The improved stoves in this community have been effective in reducing indoor air pollution and child exposure, although both measures were still high by international standards. Large donor-funded stove programmes need to aim for wider acceptance and uptake by the local families. Better stove maintenance is also required.

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