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Geospatial Mapping of Indoor Air Quality and Respiratory Illnesses in an Urban Slum

Introduction Air pollution is a well-recognized determinant of health. The general perception has focused primarily on outdoor pollution, and indoor pollution which may be due to smoking, biomass use, an extension of outdoor pollution, etc. has been neglected. It is therefore imperative to understan...

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Autores principales: Shah, Samyak T, Shabadi, Nayanabai, Karkra, Rohan, Rao, Vadaga V
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10013255/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36925977
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.34890
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author Shah, Samyak T
Shabadi, Nayanabai
Karkra, Rohan
Rao, Vadaga V
author_facet Shah, Samyak T
Shabadi, Nayanabai
Karkra, Rohan
Rao, Vadaga V
author_sort Shah, Samyak T
collection PubMed
description Introduction Air pollution is a well-recognized determinant of health. The general perception has focused primarily on outdoor pollution, and indoor pollution which may be due to smoking, biomass use, an extension of outdoor pollution, etc. has been neglected. It is therefore imperative to understand the levels of indoor pollution and find out if these are associated with high rates of illnesses, particularly, respiratory diseases. Material and methods This was a cross-sectional study involving 300 houses and 727 participants in an urban slum, selected through simple random sampling. Indoor air quality was assessed using the Prana C -Air Plus air quality monitor (Prana Air, New Delhi, India). The instrument detected formaldehyde, air quality index (AQI), temperature, humidity, PM2.5, PM10 particles, and total volatile organic (TVO) compounds. Socio-demographic details were noted, and geospatial mapping was done using Q-GIS software (www.qgis.org). A questionnaire was used to survey the residents of those houses. Ethical committee clearance was obtained before starting the project. Results The mean distribution of pollution parameters over the entire study area was AQI - 67.4±65.48, PM 2.5 - 37.6±35.82 μg/m(3), formaldehyde - 0.09±0.37 mg/m(3), PM 10 - 43.9±38.59 μg/m(3), TVO compounds - 0.43±2.13 mg/m(3), CO(2 )- 1128.9±323.86 ppm, temperature - 23.7±21.2 degree Celsius, and PM 1 - 24.3±20.5 μg/m(3); 2.6% of the participants had respiratory diseases, and a significant association was found between the AQI, TVO compounds and ventilation, and respiratory diseases (p<0.05). Conclusion Indoor air pollution not unlike outdoor pollution can have dramatic health effects and needs to be addressed to lower the overall respiratory disease burden. The AQI, TVOC, and poor ventilation/cross-ventilation are associated with respiratory illnesses. Geospatial mapping shows a concentration of cases in areas of high pollution.
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spelling pubmed-100132552023-03-15 Geospatial Mapping of Indoor Air Quality and Respiratory Illnesses in an Urban Slum Shah, Samyak T Shabadi, Nayanabai Karkra, Rohan Rao, Vadaga V Cureus Preventive Medicine Introduction Air pollution is a well-recognized determinant of health. The general perception has focused primarily on outdoor pollution, and indoor pollution which may be due to smoking, biomass use, an extension of outdoor pollution, etc. has been neglected. It is therefore imperative to understand the levels of indoor pollution and find out if these are associated with high rates of illnesses, particularly, respiratory diseases. Material and methods This was a cross-sectional study involving 300 houses and 727 participants in an urban slum, selected through simple random sampling. Indoor air quality was assessed using the Prana C -Air Plus air quality monitor (Prana Air, New Delhi, India). The instrument detected formaldehyde, air quality index (AQI), temperature, humidity, PM2.5, PM10 particles, and total volatile organic (TVO) compounds. Socio-demographic details were noted, and geospatial mapping was done using Q-GIS software (www.qgis.org). A questionnaire was used to survey the residents of those houses. Ethical committee clearance was obtained before starting the project. Results The mean distribution of pollution parameters over the entire study area was AQI - 67.4±65.48, PM 2.5 - 37.6±35.82 μg/m(3), formaldehyde - 0.09±0.37 mg/m(3), PM 10 - 43.9±38.59 μg/m(3), TVO compounds - 0.43±2.13 mg/m(3), CO(2 )- 1128.9±323.86 ppm, temperature - 23.7±21.2 degree Celsius, and PM 1 - 24.3±20.5 μg/m(3); 2.6% of the participants had respiratory diseases, and a significant association was found between the AQI, TVO compounds and ventilation, and respiratory diseases (p<0.05). Conclusion Indoor air pollution not unlike outdoor pollution can have dramatic health effects and needs to be addressed to lower the overall respiratory disease burden. The AQI, TVOC, and poor ventilation/cross-ventilation are associated with respiratory illnesses. Geospatial mapping shows a concentration of cases in areas of high pollution. Cureus 2023-02-12 /pmc/articles/PMC10013255/ /pubmed/36925977 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.34890 Text en Copyright © 2023, Shah et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Preventive Medicine
Shah, Samyak T
Shabadi, Nayanabai
Karkra, Rohan
Rao, Vadaga V
Geospatial Mapping of Indoor Air Quality and Respiratory Illnesses in an Urban Slum
title Geospatial Mapping of Indoor Air Quality and Respiratory Illnesses in an Urban Slum
title_full Geospatial Mapping of Indoor Air Quality and Respiratory Illnesses in an Urban Slum
title_fullStr Geospatial Mapping of Indoor Air Quality and Respiratory Illnesses in an Urban Slum
title_full_unstemmed Geospatial Mapping of Indoor Air Quality and Respiratory Illnesses in an Urban Slum
title_short Geospatial Mapping of Indoor Air Quality and Respiratory Illnesses in an Urban Slum
title_sort geospatial mapping of indoor air quality and respiratory illnesses in an urban slum
topic Preventive Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10013255/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36925977
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.34890
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