Department of Environmental Health, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, Mass; Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Mass.
Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Mass.
J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2014 Jan;133(1):77-84. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2013.06.003. Epub 2013 Jul 31.
Although indoor environmental conditions can affect pediatric asthmatic patients, few studies have characterized the effect of building interventions on asthma-related outcomes. Simulation models can evaluate such complex systems but have not been applied in this context.
We sought to evaluate the impact of building interventions on indoor environmental quality and pediatric asthma health care use, and to conduct cost comparisons between intervention and health care costs and energy savings.
We applied our previously developed discrete event simulation model (DEM) to simulate the effect of environmental factors, medication compliance, seasonality, and medical history on (1) pollutant concentrations indoors and (2) asthma outcomes in low-income multifamily housing. We estimated health care use and costs at baseline and subsequent to interventions, and then compared health care costs with energy savings and intervention costs.
Interventions, such as integrated pest management and repairing kitchen exhaust fans, led to 7% to 12% reductions in serious asthma events with 1- to 3-year payback periods. Weatherization efforts targeted solely toward tightening a building envelope led to 20% more serious asthma events, but bundling with repairing kitchen exhaust fans and eliminating indoor sources (eg, gas stoves or smokers) mitigated this effect.
Our pediatric asthma model provides a tool to prioritize individual and bundled building interventions based on their effects on health and costs, highlighting the tradeoffs between weatherization, indoor air quality, and health. Our work bridges the gap between clinical and environmental health sciences by increasing physicians' understanding of the effect that home environmental changes can have on their patients' asthma.
尽管室内环境条件会影响儿科哮喘患者,但很少有研究描述建筑干预对哮喘相关结果的影响。模拟模型可以评估此类复杂系统,但尚未在这方面应用。
我们旨在评估建筑干预对室内环境质量和儿科哮喘保健使用的影响,并对干预和保健成本与能源节约之间的成本进行比较。
我们应用之前开发的离散事件模拟模型(DEM)来模拟环境因素、药物依从性、季节性和病史对(1)室内污染物浓度和(2)低收入多户住房中哮喘结果的影响。我们在基线和干预后估计保健使用和成本,然后将保健成本与能源节约和干预成本进行比较。
综合虫害管理和修复厨房排气扇等干预措施可将严重哮喘事件减少 7%至 12%,投资回收期为 1 至 3 年。仅针对建筑围护结构进行的隔热措施导致严重哮喘事件增加 20%,但与修复厨房排气扇和消除室内污染源(如煤气炉或吸烟者)相结合可以减轻这种影响。
我们的儿科哮喘模型提供了一种工具,可根据其对健康和成本的影响来优先考虑单个和综合的建筑干预措施,突出了隔热、室内空气质量和健康之间的权衡。我们的工作通过增加医生对家庭环境变化对患者哮喘影响的理解,弥合了临床和环境卫生科学之间的差距。