Noonan Curtis W, Ward Tony J, Navidi William, Sheppard Lianne, Bergauff Megan, Palmer Chris
Center for Environmental Health Sciences, Department of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Montana, Missoula, Montana 59812, USA. USA.
Res Rep Health Eff Inst. 2011 Dec(162):3-37; discussion 39-47.
Many rural mountain valley communities experience elevated ambient levels of fine particulate matter (PM*) in the winter, because of contributions from residential wood-burning appliances and sustained temperature inversion periods during the cold season. A wood stove change-out program was implemented in a community heavily affected by wood-smoke-derived PM2.5 (PM < or = 2.5 microm in aerodynamic diameter). The objectives of this study were to evaluate the impact of this intervention program on ambient and indoor PM2.5 concentrations and to identify possible corresponding changes in the frequency of childhood respiratory symptoms and infections and illness-related school absences. Over 1100 old wood stoves were replaced with new EPA-certified wood stoves or other heating sources. Ambient PM2.5 concentrations were 30% lower in the winter after the changeout program, compared with baseline winters, which brought the community's ambient air within the PM2.5 standards of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA). The installation of a new wood stove resulted in an overall reduction in indoor PM2.5 concentrations in a small sample of wood-burning homes, but the effects were highly variable across homes. Community-level reductions in wood-smoke-derived PM2.5 concentration were associated with decreased reports of childhood wheeze and of other childhood respiratory health conditions. The association was not limited to children living in homes with wood stoves nor does it appear to be limited to susceptible children (e.g., children with asthma). Community-level reductions in wood-smoke-derived PM2.5 concentration were also associated with lower illness-related school absences among older children, but this finding was not consistent across all age-groups. This community-level intervention provided a unique opportunity to prospectively observe exposure and outcome changes resulting from a targeted air pollution reduction strategy.
由于冬季居民燃木取暖设备的使用以及寒冷季节持续的逆温天气,许多农村山谷社区的空气中细颗粒物(PM*)含量在冬季会升高。在一个受源自木柴烟雾的细颗粒物(PM2.5,空气动力学直径小于或等于2.5微米)严重影响的社区实施了一项更换木炉的计划。本研究的目的是评估该干预计划对环境空气中和室内PM2.5浓度的影响,并确定儿童呼吸道症状和感染的频率以及与疾病相关的缺课情况可能发生的相应变化。1100多个旧木炉被更换为新的美国环境保护局(EPA)认证的木炉或其他取暖源。与基线冬季相比,更换计划实施后的冬季,环境空气中的PM2.5浓度降低了30%,使该社区的环境空气质量达到了美国环境保护局的PM2.5标准。在一小部分使用木柴取暖的家庭中,安装新木炉使室内PM2.5浓度总体有所降低,但不同家庭的效果差异很大。社区层面源自木柴烟雾的PM2.5浓度降低与儿童喘息及其他儿童呼吸道健康状况报告的减少相关。这种关联不仅限于居住在使用木炉家庭中的儿童,似乎也不限于易感儿童(如患有哮喘的儿童)。社区层面源自木柴烟雾的PM2.5浓度降低还与大龄儿童与疾病相关的缺课率降低相关,但这一发现并非在所有年龄组中都一致。这种社区层面的干预提供了一个独特的机会,可以前瞻性地观察有针对性的空气污染减排策略所导致的暴露和结果变化。