Xie Sherrie, Meeker Jessica R, Perez Luzmercy, Eriksen Whitney, Localio Anna, Park Hami, Jen Alicia, Goldstein Madison, Temeng Akua F, Morales Sarai M, Christie Colin, Greenblatt Rebecca E, Barg Frances K, Apter Andrea J, Himes Blanca E
Department, of Biostatistics, Epidemiology and Informatics, University of Pennsylvania, 402 Blockley Hall, 423 Guardian Drive, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, USA.
Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Division, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, USA.
Asthma Res Pract. 2021 Sep 5;7(1):13. doi: 10.1186/s40733-021-00079-9.
Exposure to fine particulate matter (PM) increases the risk of asthma exacerbations, and thus, monitoring personal exposure to PM may aid in disease self-management. Low-cost, portable air pollution sensors offer a convenient way to measure personal pollution exposure directly and may improve personalized monitoring compared with traditional methods that rely on stationary monitoring stations. We aimed to understand whether adults with asthma would be willing to use personal sensors to monitor their exposure to air pollution and to assess the feasibility of using sensors to measure real-time PM exposure.
We conducted semi-structured interviews with 15 adults with asthma to understand their willingness to use a personal pollution sensor and their privacy preferences with regard to sensor data. Student research assistants used HabitatMap AirBeam devices to take PM measurements at 1-s intervals while walking in Philadelphia neighborhoods in May-August 2018. AirBeam PM measurements were compared to concurrent measurements taken by three nearby regulatory monitors.
All interview participants stated that they would use a personal air pollution sensor, though the consensus was that devices should be small (watch- or palm-sized) and light. Patients were generally unconcerned about privacy or sharing their GPS location, with only two stating they would not share their GPS location under any circumstances. PM measurements were taken using AirBeam sensors on 34 walks that extended through five Philadelphia neighborhoods. The range of sensor PM measurements was 0.6-97.6 μg/mL (mean 6.8 μg/mL), compared to 0-22.6 μg/mL (mean 9.0 μg/mL) measured by nearby regulatory monitors. Compared to stationary measurements, which were only available as 1-h integrated averages at discrete monitoring sites, sensor measurements permitted characterization of fine-scale fluctuations in PM levels over time and space.
Patients were generally interested in using sensors to monitor their personal exposure to PM and willing to share personal sensor data with health care providers and researchers. Compared to traditional methods of personal exposure assessment, sensors captured personalized air quality information at higher spatiotemporal resolution. Improvements to currently available sensors, including more reliable Bluetooth connectivity, increased portability, and longer battery life would facilitate their use in a general patient population.
暴露于细颗粒物(PM)会增加哮喘发作的风险,因此,监测个人对PM的暴露情况可能有助于疾病的自我管理。低成本、便携式空气污染传感器提供了一种直接测量个人污染暴露的便捷方法,与依赖固定监测站的传统方法相比,可能会改善个性化监测。我们旨在了解哮喘成人患者是否愿意使用个人传感器来监测其空气污染暴露情况,并评估使用传感器测量实时PM暴露的可行性。
我们对15名哮喘成人患者进行了半结构化访谈,以了解他们使用个人污染传感器的意愿以及对传感器数据的隐私偏好。学生研究助理在2018年5月至8月于费城各社区行走时,使用HabitatMap AirBeam设备以1秒的间隔进行PM测量。将AirBeam的PM测量结果与附近三个监管监测器同时进行的测量结果进行比较。
所有访谈参与者均表示他们会使用个人空气污染传感器,不过大家一致认为设备应该小巧(手表或手掌大小)且轻便。患者通常不担心隐私问题或共享其GPS位置,只有两人表示在任何情况下都不会共享其GPS位置。在延伸至费城五个社区的34次行走中,使用AirBeam传感器进行了PM测量。传感器测量的PM范围为0.6 - 97.6μg/mL(平均6.8μg/mL),而附近监管监测器测量的范围为0 - 22.6μg/mL(平均9.0μg/mL)。与仅在离散监测点以1小时综合平均值形式提供的固定测量相比,传感器测量能够表征PM水平在时间和空间上的精细尺度波动。
患者普遍对使用传感器监测其个人对PM的暴露情况感兴趣,并愿意与医疗保健提供者和研究人员共享个人传感器数据。与传统的个人暴露评估方法相比,传感器以更高的时空分辨率获取了个性化的空气质量信息。对现有传感器的改进,包括更可靠的蓝牙连接、更高的便携性和更长的电池续航时间,将有助于其在普通患者群体中的使用。