School of Architecture and Built Environment, Faculty of Engineering, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD 4000, Australia.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Feb 7;19(3):1854. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19031854.
In response to an Australian governmental inquiry into biotoxin-related illness, the purpose of this integrative review is to bring together the current state of evidence on the prevalence, risk factors and impacts related to mould-affected housing in an Australian context, in order to inform building, housing and health research, practice and policy. The robust integrative review methodology simultaneously sought quantitative and qualitative studies and grey literature from multiple disciplines, identifying only 45 studies directly relating to Australian housing and indoor mould. Twenty-one studies highlight negative health impacts relating to indoor residential mould, with asthma, respiratory, allergy conditions and emerging health concerns for chronic multiple-symptom presentation. The majority of studies reported risk factors for indoor mould including poor housing conditions, poor-quality rental accommodation, socioeconomic circumstance, age-related housing issues and concerns for surface/interstitial condensation and building defects in newer housing. Risks for indoor mould in both older and newer housing raise concerns for the extent of the problem of indoor mould in Australia. Understanding the national prevalence of housing risks and "root cause" associated with indoor mould is not conclusive from the limited existing evidence. Synthesis of this evidence reveals a lack of coverage on: (1) national and geographical representation, (2) climatical coverage, (3) housing typologies, (4) housing defects, (5) maintenance, (6) impact from urbanisation, and (7) occupant's behaviour. This integrative review was key in identifying emerging housing and health concerns, highlighting gaps in data and implications to be addressed by researchers, practice and policy and acts as a comprehensive holistic review process that can be applied to other countries.
针对澳大利亚政府对生物毒素相关疾病的调查,本次综合审查的目的是汇集目前在澳大利亚背景下与受霉菌影响的住房相关的流行率、风险因素和影响的证据现状,以便为建筑、住房和健康研究、实践和政策提供信息。稳健的综合审查方法同时从多个学科中寻找定量和定性研究以及灰色文献,仅确定了 45 项直接涉及澳大利亚住房和室内霉菌的研究。21 项研究强调了与室内住宅霉菌相关的负面健康影响,包括哮喘、呼吸道、过敏状况以及新兴的慢性多症状表现的健康问题。大多数研究报告了室内霉菌的风险因素,包括住房条件差、出租住房质量差、社会经济状况、与年龄相关的住房问题以及对表面/间质冷凝和较新住房建筑缺陷的关注。新旧住房中的室内霉菌风险引发了对澳大利亚室内霉菌问题严重程度的担忧。从现有有限的证据来看,对于与室内霉菌相关的住房风险和“根本原因”的全国流行率,还没有明确的结论。对这些证据进行综合分析表明,还存在以下方面的不足:(1)全国和地域代表性;(2)气候覆盖范围;(3)住房类型;(4)住房缺陷;(5)维护;(6)城市化的影响;以及(7)居住者的行为。本次综合审查是确定新出现的住房和健康问题的关键,突出了数据空白以及研究人员、实践和政策需要解决的问题,并作为一种可应用于其他国家的全面综合审查过程。