Title: Asthma
1Asthma Air Quality Issues
- Jerome A. Paulson, MD
- Professor of Pediatrics
- Environmental and Occupational Health
- George Washington University
- Director, Mid-Atlantic Center for Childrens
Health the Environment - Medical Director for National Global Affairs,
Child Health Advocacy Institute - Childrens National Medical Center
The Mid-Atlantic Center for Childrens Health
the Environment
2Dr Paulson has NO conflicts of interest to
declare.
- This material was developed by the Mid-Atlantic
Center for Childrens health the Environment
and funded under the cooperative agreement award
number 1U61TS000118-03 from the Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR). - Acknowledgement The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) supports the PEHSU by
providing funds to ATSDR under Inter-Agency
Agreement number DW-75-92301301-0. Neither EPA
nor ATSDR endorse the purchase of any commercial
products or services mentioned in PEHSU
publications.
Mid-Atlantic Center for Childrens Health the
Environment - MACCHE
3OBJECTIVES
- After attending this presentation, the listener
will be able to - Describe environmental issues related to asthma
- Describe measures to improve air quality
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4Children Are Different
- Lungs not completely formed at birth
- Continued development until adolescence
- The bronchial tree
- The alveoli (air sacs)
- More lung surface area per unit body weight
- Different respiratory pattern
- Different activity pattern
The Mid-Atlantic Center for Childrens Health
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5Asthma
- Most common disease of childhood
- Over 7 million children
- Number one cause of school absenteeism
- 10.5 million missed school days per year
- Millions of hours of lost work per year for
parents - The prevalence of asthma among children in 2008
was estimated at 10 - Some communities up to 25 of children (Central
Harlem)
Nicholas et al. 2005. Am J Public Health.
95245249
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6Asthma Prevalence Rates
- Asthma prevalence rates increased approximately 4
percent per year between 1980 and 1996. Rates in
subsequent years (1997-2007), reported in three
asthma categories, show no sharp upward or
downward change through most of the time period
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1
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7Asthma Mortality
Numbers of asthma-related deaths per 1 million
children 0 to 17 years of age in the United
States in 1980 2005
- Asthma-related death rates increased by an
average of 3.2 per year from 1980 through 1996
and then decreased by an average of 3.9 per year
from 1996 through 2005 - 2005 2.3 asthma-related deaths per 1 million
children - 167 deaths. nationally
- High rates of asthma mortality among African
Americans, low-income populations, and
populations with low educational levels
Grant EN, Lyttle CS, Weiss KB. The relation of
socioeconomic factors and racial/ethnic
difference in US asthma mortality. Am J Public
Health. 20009019235.
Akinbami LJ. 2009. Status of childhood asthma in
the United States, 1980-2007. Pediatrics. 123
Suppl 3S131-145
8Cost of Asthma
- Children with asthma had 92 higher total direct
medical expenditures than those without asthma
(parameter estimate 1.92 p lt 0.0001) - Annual adjusted mean incremental total
expenditure associated with asthma was 1,004.6
(SE 326.1 p 0.002) per person among children
- Prescription medications and physician office
visits constituted approximately 38 of the total
incremental expenditures for asthma in children
Kamble S. Bharmal M. 2009. Incremental direct
expenditure of treating asthma in the United
States. Journal of Asthma. 4673-80
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9Asthma
- Cause unknown
- Indoor and outdoor air pollution can make it
worse - Children in urban settings at increased risk for
asthma - Death more likely among blacks, Puerto Ricans and
poor
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10Indoor Air Quality
http//www.epa.gov/apti/course422/ap4.html
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11Indoor Air Quality
- In the US, children spend more time indoors than
out of doors - May spend 30-50 hours/wk in and around school
buildings - before school/after school care
- school day
- Indoor air is unregulated except for smoking laws
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12Asthma Indoor Air Pollution
- Indoor air pollutants that can set off asthma
attacks - Dust mites
- Animals cats, dogs, rats or mice
- Environmental tobacco smoke
- Molds
- Chemicals in the air wood smoke, paint, perfume,
cosmetics, pesticides, cleaning agents
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13Indoor Air Quality Schools
- Report by the U.S. Government Accounting Office,
the Condition of America's Schools, over half the
schools surveyed reported at least one
environmental problem which affects indoor air
quality
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14Indoor Air Quality Schools
- An issue for staff as well as students
- Outdoor air quality affects indoor air quality
- Diesel exhaust - air intake for building
- Pollens
- Indoor air quality varies with time of day and
day of week
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15Indoor Air Quality Schools and Home
- Symptoms commonly attributed to poor IAQ
- headache, fatigue, shortness of breath
- sinus congestion, coughing , sneezing
- eye, nose, throat or skin irritation
- dizziness and nausea
- nose bleeds (after exposure to formaldehyde)
- From AAP Handbook of Pediatric Environmental
Health
The Mid-Atlantic Center for Childrens Health
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16Indoor Air Quality Schools
- Clues to indoor air problems
- Symptoms widespread within class or school
- Symptoms diminish or disappear after leaving
school - Sudden onset after a change in school i.e.,
painting, pesticide application - Those with allergies and asthma have reactions
indoors but not outdoors - From AAP Handbook of Pediatric Environmental
Health
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17Environmental Tobacco Smoke (ETS)
- Consists of more than 3800 chemical compounds
- Decreasing exposure to ETS over last decade
- Children exposed to ETS in utero or infancy are
more likely to develop asthma - Children with asthma who are exposed to ETS are
more likely to have an asthma attack
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18Cockroaches
- Need warmth
- Need water
- Need source of food same as us
- Kitchen
- Where food is consumed
- At home where we watch TV
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19Asthma Morbidity Associated with Cockroach Antigen
- -/- no allergy/low exposure
- -/ no allergy/high exposure
- /- allergy/low exposure
- / allergy/high exposure
Rosenstreich, et al. NEJM. 336(19)1356-63, 1997
May 8
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20Cockroach Control
- Limit their access to food
- Keep food in sealed containers
- Clean up all spilled food
- Eliminate water - leaky plumbing, leaky roof
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21House Dust Mites
- Need warmth
- Need high humidity
- Need source of food
- Live in mattresses, upholstered furniture and
carpet
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22Asthma Morbidity Associated with House Dust Mite
Sensitivity
Peat et al. Aust NZ J Med 199424270-6
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23House dust mite control
- Keep humidity below 50 ? air conditioner in
summer (In school buildings - even if closed) - Remove carpeting
- Damp mop floor surface
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24Molds
- Need water
- Need source of food wallpaper, wood, or
cardboard - Can cause both allergic and irritant effects
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25Mold control
- Keep humidity below 50 ? air conditioner in
summer (In school buildings - even if closed) - Fix leaks and clean up spills with in 48 hours
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26Pets
- Cats
- Dogs
- Rodents
- Birds - possibly from dust mites in feathers
- Danders can track from home to car to school
- Personal choice at home
- NO PETS in school
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27Asthma Indoor Air Pollution
- Prevention
- No smoking
- Control moisture
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28Outdoor Air Pollution
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29The Major Air Pollutants
- CO
- SOx (SO2)
- NOx (NO, NO2)
- Particulates (PM)
- Ozone
- Lead
- Volatile organic compounds (Hydrocarbons)
- Air toxics (solvents, pesticides, metals, etc.)
criteria pollutants
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30Sources of Air Pollutants
- Mobile sources cars and trucks
- Power plants
- Other industry
- Incinerators
- Minor sources
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31Particulates
- Mixture of solid and liquid particles
- Natural sources dust from soil, evaporation of
sea water - Combustion and metallurgical processes (e.g fly
ash from coal diesel exhaust) - Secondary formation oxidation of atmospheric
gases (e.g. SO2?H2SO4), aerosol formation through
condensation and accumulation
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32Asthma Outdoor Air Pollution
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33Asthma Outdoor Air Pollution
- Ozone and ER Visits Atlanta Children
- Each increase of 20 ppb ozone associated with 4
increase in ER visits - Other risk factors
- black race (2.2-fold increase)
- male (1.4-fold increase)
- on Medicaid (1.25-fold increase)
- pollen, mold, temperature no increases in risk
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34Ozone Asthma
- 1996 Summer Olympics - Atlanta
- Ground level ozone ? 28
- decreased traffic and increased public
transportation - 42 reduction in asthma acute care events for
Medicaid kids
Friedman MS, Powell KE, Hutwanger L, et al. JAMA
285897-905, 2001.
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35CHS Ozone and New-onset Asthma
McConnell R. Berhane K. Gilliland F. London SJ.
Islam T. Gauderman WJ. Avol E. Margolis HG.
Peters JM. Asthma in exercising children exposed
to ozone a cohort study. Lancet.
359(9304)386-91, 2002 Feb 2.
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36Control and Prevention of Outdoor Air Pollution
- Control of mobile sources
- ? emissions through cleaner gasoline and diesel
engines - alternative fuel vehicles e.g. natural gas,
electric, hybrid - ? motor vehicle use e.g. mass transit, carpools,
biking - changes in driving habits e.g. slower starts,
trip-stacking, off-hours refueling
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37Control and Prevention of Outdoor Air Pollution
- Control of fixed sources
- ? power plant emissions through cleaner
construction and operation, and use of cleaner
fuels - ? industrial emissions through advanced
production techniques - ? production through reduce/reuse/recycle
initiatives
The Mid-Atlantic Center for Childrens Health
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38Control and Prevention of Outdoor Air Pollution
- Control of fixed sources
- ? consumer energy demand through more efficient
appliances, improved home and office insulation,
behavioral changes - ? reliance on renewable energy sources e.g.
solar, wind, hydroelectric
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39Control and Prevention of Outdoor Air Pollution
Toyota Prius
Honda Insight
?
GM EV1
Nissan LEAF
40Air Quality Index
Descriptors Cautionary Statement
Good 0 50 No message
Moderate 51 100 Unusually sensitive individuals
Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups 101 150 Identifiable groups at risk - different groups for different pollutants
Unhealthy 151 200 General public at risk sensitive groups at greater risk
Very Unhealthy 201 - 300 General public at greater risk sensitive groups at greatest risk
41AIRNow - www.airnow.gov
42THE MID-ATLANTIC CENTER FOR CHILDRENS HEALTH
THE ENVIRONMENT(MACCHE)
- A PEDIATRIC ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SPECIALTY UNIT
(PEHSU)
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43MACCHE
- Region 3
- Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, West
Virginia, the District of Columbia - 1-866-622-2431 (1-866-MACCHE1)
- 202-994-1166
- www.health-e-kids.org
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