Title: Rural and urban exposure to indoor air pollution
1Rural and urban exposure to indoor air pollution
- Sumeet Saksena
- East West Center
- Honolulu
2Alternative title Satisfying the curiosity of
the ambient air pollution experts about IAP
- Principle used do not preach to the converted
- What do we know and what do we not know about IAP
related human exposures? - Why we do what we do?
3Basics of human exposure assessment
- Whose exposure?
- Infants, children, adults (women?), elders, etc.
- Influenced by health outcome focus
- Implications on protocols (breathing zone,
activity patterns, etc) - Where is the exposure happening?
- Indoors (kitchen, living room), Outdoors (yard,
near house, far from house) - Duration of exposure?
- High concentration short duration exposure
- Low concentration long duration exposure
4Exposure assessment direct approach
- Personal monitoring for 24 hours or lesser
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6Exposure assessment indirect approach
micro-environmental modeling
- Identify major microenvironments
- Indoors during cooking
- Indoors non-cooking (day vs. night)
- Outdoors (near ambient)
- Daily exposure is time weighted average of area
levels (breathing height) in these
microenvironments
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9Typical levels of key pollutants related to
cook-stoves (wood fuel)
10Typical levels of key pollutants related to
cook-stoves (kerosene/gas)
11Typical levels of key pollutants related to
cook-stoves key messages
- Anomalies partly due to lack of uniformity in
measurement protocols - Background PM levels are high
12Particulate matter size distribution
- Recent study in Costa Rica indicated two peaks at
0.7 and 2.5 microns - In lab studies, unimodal aerosol size
distributions observed with mass median
aerodynamic diameters of 0.5-0.8 microns
13Trends in measurement methods
- PM gravimetric
- Low-flow pumps for area/stationary or personal
sampling - Medium-flow pumps for area/micro-environmental
sampling - Cyclones for 3.5, 4, and 5 microns
- Impactors for 2.5 and 10 microns
- Advantage standard methods available (e.g. NIOSH
0600), further chemical analysis - Disadvantage cost ( 1500 per kit), high QA/QC
skills, electricity in the field, etc.
14Trends in measurement methods (cont.)
- PM real time
- Based on optical scattering/ ionization. Very few
studies so far - Advantage real time data, some makes are
inexpensive (UCB monitor), multi-stage size
cut-offs - Disadvantages commercial access difficult, some
models cannot be used in personal mode, particle
size-cut off convention different from
traditional conventions.
15Trends in measurement methods (cont.)
- CO
- Potentiometric dosimeters standard, durable,
expensive - Diffusion tubes cheap, 25 error
16Spatial variations
- Why study?
- Whose exposure?
- Defining the breathing zone
- Within the kitchen variations
- Horizontal distance from stove, but being far
is not necessarily safer depends on fuel, stove
and ventilation conditions - Vertical variations smoke hangs at about 4 feet
- Inter-room variations
- Cook moves around
- Others in the family
17Temporal variations
- Across meals
- Day-to-day variations mixed results so far
- Seasonal variations few studies, changes in type
of fuel, cooking activity, weather and
ventilation - Few studies conducted with long sampling duration
(e.g. one week), but short term measurements not
made simultaneously, so cannot conclude
18Impacts of stove interventions
- Type 1 studies cross-sectional designs
- Early studies in India and Nepal led to
inconclusive results due to design weaknesses
(confounding) - Modest benefits for TSP, better for CO
- Hoods more effective
- Problems due to neighbours smoke and background
levels - Type 2 studies before-and-after comparisons
- PM reductions of 40-60
- Area levels reduction gt personal levels reduction
- Study in Kenya found hoods far more effective,
and windows ineffective
19Correlations between and among pollutants
- Why study this?
- Identify simple and inexpensive proxy indicators
for PM - Simplify personal monitoring
- Correlation between CO and PM (co-located
sampling) - Degree of correlation higher over longer periods
of time as compared to shorter periods - As PM size decreases correlation with CO
increases - Mixed results across studies. Degree of
correlation depends on stove, fuel, ventilation
factors, etc.
20Correlations between and among pollutants (cont.)
- Correlation between area and personal sampling
- Mixed results across studies
- Situation specific
21Other major explanatory factors
- Recent studies have provided evidence of the
important role of - Type of house
- Location of kitchen
- Kitchen architecture
- Ventilation
- There is an urgent need to have standard
definitions for the above parameters (e.g. what
is open cooking?)
22Role of time activity patterns
- Obvious more time spent cooking greater the
exposure - Not so obvious Interventions and natural
transitions not only change emissions but may
impact on activity patters and behaviour. The NET
impact on exposure can be positive, negative or
zero.
23Exposure across fuel groups Delhi slum case study
- Mean daily exposure not significantly different
between wood and kerosene users - More meals, more items, longer meals longer
cooking times in kerosene houses - Kerosene users cook indoors, wood users outdoors
- Infants of kerosene users near stove longer
24Exposures in urban/peri-urban areas
- Concentration levels during cooking same as in
rural areas same fuels, stoves, small kitchens - Exposure to PM due to cooking as a fraction of
daily exposure - gt 75 in rural areas
- 10-20 in urban areas
25Exposures in urban/peri-urban areas (cont.)
- Dense housing implies
- Smoke from one house infiltrates another house
- High near-ambient levels (gt 500 ug/m3 for PM5)
- Need community-wide interventions
- Cluster of houses act as an area source of
ambient air pollution at micro-urban scales - Indoor-outdoor relationships are complicated and
not well studied
26IAP exposures and epidemiology
- Only one study (Kenya) quantified the link
between exposure and incidence of ALRI - Concave relationship
- Rate of increase declining above 11-2 mg/m3
- Highlighted the role of short term peaks
- Elevated levels occur during fire ignition
(especially for coal and charcoal) and fire
tending - There is a need to have standard sampling
durations (15 minutes, meal time, 24 hour?)
27Key research questions/issues for the future
- PM size distribution under field conditions
- Correlation between area and personal sampling
- Quantifying the impact of housing and ventilation
variables - Indoor-outdoor relationships in urban/peri-urban
areas - Measurement of acute exposures
28Key issues for aid agencies for the future
- Development of simple and inexpensive methods and
protocols - Identification of other types of interventions in
addition to improved stoves - Harmonization of methods
- Training of NGO trainers
- Creating repositories of instruments, Technical
Backup Units (linked to NGOs) with advanced
infrastructure