TY - JOUR
T1 - Respiratory risks from household air pollution in low and middle income countries
AU - Gordon, Stephen B.
AU - Bruce, Nigel G.
AU - Grigg, Jonathan
AU - Hibberd, Patricia L.
AU - Kurmi, Om P.
AU - Lam, Kin bong Hubert
AU - Mortimer, Kevin
AU - Asante, Kwaku Poku
AU - Balakrishnan, Kalpana
AU - Balmes, John
AU - Bar-Zeev, Naor
AU - Bates, Michael N.
AU - Breysse, Patrick N.
AU - Buist, Sonia
AU - Chen, Zhengming
AU - Havens, Deborah
AU - Jack, Darby
AU - Jindal, Surinder
AU - Kan, Haidong
AU - Mehta, Sumi
AU - Moschovis, Peter
AU - Naeher, Luke
AU - Patel, Archana
AU - Perez-Padilla, Rogelio
AU - Pope, Daniel
AU - Rylance, Jamie
AU - Semple, Sean
AU - Martin, William J.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Jane Ardrey for collating, editing, and managing the production of this report, and we thank Shaun Pennington for technical assistance with figures and references. We thank Han Duijvendak and his team at HANDSTAND productions for photography. We acknowledge funding from the Medical Research Council (BREATHE Partnership grant) and input to the discussion of this Commission at the Collaboration for Applied Health Research and Delivery (CAHRD) meeting at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, UK, on June 12–13, 2014. We thank James Jetter (US Environmental Protection Agency, NC, USA) for permission to use figure 3 .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Elsevier Ltd.
PY - 2014/10/1
Y1 - 2014/10/1
N2 - A third of the world's population uses solid fuel derived from plant material (biomass) or coal for cooking, heating, or lighting. These fuels are smoky, often used in an open fire or simple stove with incomplete combustion, and result in a large amount of household air pollution when smoke is poorly vented. Air pollution is the biggest environmental cause of death worldwide, with household air pollution accounting for about 3·5-4 million deaths every year. Women and children living in severe poverty have the greatest exposures to household air pollution. In this Commission, we review evidence for the association between household air pollution and respiratory infections, respiratory tract cancers, and chronic lung diseases. Respiratory infections (comprising both upper and lower respiratory tract infections with viruses, bacteria, and mycobacteria) have all been associated with exposure to household air pollution. Respiratory tract cancers, including both nasopharyngeal cancer and lung cancer, are strongly associated with pollution from coal burning and further data are needed about other solid fuels. Chronic lung diseases, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and bronchiectasis in women, are associated with solid fuel use for cooking, and the damaging effects of exposure to household air pollution in early life on lung development are yet to be fully described. We also review appropriate ways to measure exposure to household air pollution, as well as study design issues and potential effective interventions to prevent these disease burdens. Measurement of household air pollution needs individual, rather than fixed in place, monitoring because exposure varies by age, gender, location, and household role. Women and children are particularly susceptible to the toxic effects of pollution and are exposed to the highest concentrations. Interventions should target these high-risk groups and be of sufficient quality to make the air clean. To make clean energy available to all people is the long-term goal, with an intermediate solution being to make available energy that is clean enough to have a health impact.
AB - A third of the world's population uses solid fuel derived from plant material (biomass) or coal for cooking, heating, or lighting. These fuels are smoky, often used in an open fire or simple stove with incomplete combustion, and result in a large amount of household air pollution when smoke is poorly vented. Air pollution is the biggest environmental cause of death worldwide, with household air pollution accounting for about 3·5-4 million deaths every year. Women and children living in severe poverty have the greatest exposures to household air pollution. In this Commission, we review evidence for the association between household air pollution and respiratory infections, respiratory tract cancers, and chronic lung diseases. Respiratory infections (comprising both upper and lower respiratory tract infections with viruses, bacteria, and mycobacteria) have all been associated with exposure to household air pollution. Respiratory tract cancers, including both nasopharyngeal cancer and lung cancer, are strongly associated with pollution from coal burning and further data are needed about other solid fuels. Chronic lung diseases, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and bronchiectasis in women, are associated with solid fuel use for cooking, and the damaging effects of exposure to household air pollution in early life on lung development are yet to be fully described. We also review appropriate ways to measure exposure to household air pollution, as well as study design issues and potential effective interventions to prevent these disease burdens. Measurement of household air pollution needs individual, rather than fixed in place, monitoring because exposure varies by age, gender, location, and household role. Women and children are particularly susceptible to the toxic effects of pollution and are exposed to the highest concentrations. Interventions should target these high-risk groups and be of sufficient quality to make the air clean. To make clean energy available to all people is the long-term goal, with an intermediate solution being to make available energy that is clean enough to have a health impact.
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U2 - 10.1016/S2213-2600(14)70168-7
DO - 10.1016/S2213-2600(14)70168-7
M3 - Review article
C2 - 25193349
AN - SCOPUS:84908049262
SN - 2213-2600
VL - 2
SP - 823
EP - 860
JO - The Lancet Respiratory Medicine
JF - The Lancet Respiratory Medicine
IS - 10
ER -