Piddock Katy C, Gordon Stephen B, Ngwira Andrew, Msukwa Malango, Nadeau Gilbert, Davis Kourtney J, Nyirenda Moffat J, Mortimer Kevin
1 Respiratory Medicine, Aintree University Hospital, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2014 Jul;11(6):915-24. doi: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201311-413OC.
The Global Burden of Disease Study suggests almost 3.5 million people die as a consequence of household air pollution every year. Respiratory diseases including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and pneumonia in children are strongly associated with exposure to household air pollution. Smoke from burning biomass fuels for cooking, heating, and lighting is the main contributor to high household air pollution levels in low-income countries like Malawi. A greater understanding of biomass fuel use in Malawi should enable us to address household air pollution-associated communicable and noncommunicable diseases more effectively.
To conduct a cross-sectional analysis of biomass fuel use and population demographics among adults in Blantyre, Malawi.
We used global positioning system-enabled personal digital assistants to collect data on location, age, sex, marital status, education, occupation, and fuel use. We describe these data and explore associations between demographics and reported fuel type.
A total of 16,079 adults participated (nine households refused); median age was 30 years, there was a similar distribution of men and women, 60% were married, and 62% received secondary school education. The most commonly reported occupation for men and women was "salaried employment" (40.7%) and "petty trader and marketing" (23.5%), respectively. Charcoal (81.5% of households), wood (36.5%), and electricity (29.1%) were the main fuels used at home. Only 3.9% of households used electricity exclusively. Lower educational and occupational attainment was associated with greater use of wood.
This large cross-sectional study has identified extensive use of biomass fuels in a typical sub-Saharan Africa periurban population in which women and people of lower socioeconomic status are disproportionately affected. Biomass fuel use is likely to be a major driver of existing communicable respiratory disease and the emerging noncommunicable disease (especially respiratory and cardiovascular) epidemic in this region. Our data will help inform the rationale for specific intervention studies and the development of appropriately targeted public health strategies to tackle this important and poverty-related global health problem.
全球疾病负担研究表明,每年约有350万人死于家庭空气污染。包括慢性阻塞性肺疾病和儿童肺炎在内的呼吸道疾病与家庭空气污染暴露密切相关。在马拉维等低收入国家,用于烹饪、取暖和照明的生物质燃料燃烧产生的烟雾是家庭空气污染水平高的主要原因。更好地了解马拉维的生物质燃料使用情况应能使我们更有效地应对与家庭空气污染相关的传染病和非传染病。
对马拉维布兰太尔成年人的生物质燃料使用情况和人口统计学特征进行横断面分析。
我们使用配备全球定位系统的个人数字助理收集有关地点、年龄、性别、婚姻状况、教育程度、职业和燃料使用情况的数据。我们描述这些数据,并探讨人口统计学特征与报告的燃料类型之间的关联。
共有16079名成年人参与(9户拒绝参与);年龄中位数为30岁,男女分布相似,60%已婚,62%接受过中等教育。男性和女性最常报告的职业分别是“受薪就业”(40.7%)和“小商贩与市场营销”(23.5%)。木炭(81.5%的家庭)、木材(36.5%)和电力(29.1%)是家庭使用的主要燃料。只有3.9%的家庭仅使用电力。教育程度和职业成就较低与更多地使用木材有关。
这项大型横断面研究发现,在撒哈拉以南非洲典型的城市周边人群中,生物质燃料被广泛使用,其中女性和社会经济地位较低的人群受到的影响尤为严重。生物质燃料的使用可能是该地区现有传染性呼吸道疾病和新出现的非传染性疾病(尤其是呼吸道和心血管疾病)流行的主要驱动因素。我们的数据将有助于为具体干预研究提供理论依据,并制定针对性强的公共卫生策略,以解决这一重要的、与贫困相关的全球健康问题。