Mudarri D, Fisk W J
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Indoor Environments Division, Office of Radiation and Indoor Air, Washington, DC, USA.
Indoor Air. 2007 Jun;17(3):226-35. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0668.2007.00474.x.
The public health risk and economic impact of dampness and mold exposures was assessed using current asthma as a health endpoint. Individual risk of current asthma from exposure to dampness and mold in homes from W.J. Fisk, Q. Lei-Gomez & M.J. Mendell [(2007) Indoor Air, [corrected] 17, 284-296], and [corrected] asthma risks calculated from additional studies that reported the prevalence of dampness and mold in homes were used to estimate the proportion of US current asthma cases that are attributable to dampness and mold exposure at 21% (95% confidence internal 12-29%). An examination of the literature covering dampness and mold in schools, offices, and institutional buildings, which is summarized in the Appendix, suggests that risks from exposure in these buildings are similar to risks from exposures in homes. Of the 21.8 million people reported to have asthma in the USA, approximately 4.6 (2.7-6.3) million cases are estimated to be attributable to dampness and mold exposure in the home. Estimates of the national cost of asthma from two prior studies were updated to 2004 and used to estimate the economic impact of dampness and mold exposures. By applying the attributable fraction to the updated national annual cost of asthma, the national annual cost of asthma that is attributable to dampness and mold exposure in the home is estimated to be $3.5 billion ($2.1-4.8 billion). Analysis indicates that exposure to dampness and mold in buildings poses significant public health and economic risks in the USA. These findings are compatible with public policies and programs that help control moisture and mold in buildings.
There is a need to control moisture in both new and existing construction because of the significant health consequences that can result from dampness and mold. This paper demonstrates that dampness and mold in buildings is a significant public health problem with substantial economic impact.
以当前哮喘作为健康终点,评估了潮湿和霉菌暴露对公众健康的风险及经济影响。采用W.J.菲斯克、Q.雷 - 戈麦斯和M.J.门德尔[(2007)《室内空气》,[校正后]17, 284 - 296]中关于家庭中潮湿和霉菌暴露导致当前哮喘的个体风险,以及根据其他报告家庭中潮湿和霉菌患病率的研究计算出的[校正后]哮喘风险,来估计美国当前哮喘病例中可归因于潮湿和霉菌暴露的比例为21%(95%置信区间12 - 29%)。对涵盖学校、办公室和机构建筑中潮湿和霉菌情况的文献进行的审查(总结于附录中)表明,这些建筑中的暴露风险与家庭中的暴露风险相似。在美国报告患有哮喘的2180万人中,估计约有460万(270 - 630万)病例可归因于家庭中的潮湿和霉菌暴露。将两项先前研究中哮喘的国家成本估计更新至2004年,并用于估计潮湿和霉菌暴露的经济影响。通过将归因比例应用于更新后的国家年度哮喘成本,估计家庭中潮湿和霉菌暴露导致的国家年度哮喘成本为35亿美元(21 - 48亿美元)。分析表明,建筑物中的潮湿和霉菌暴露在美国构成重大的公众健康和经济风险。这些发现与有助于控制建筑物中湿度和霉菌的公共政策及项目相符。
由于潮湿和霉菌可能导致严重的健康后果,因此有必要在新建和现有建筑中控制湿度。本文表明,建筑物中的潮湿和霉菌是一个重大的公众健康问题,具有重大的经济影响。