Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Melbourne School of Design, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Sep 11;23(1):1766. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-16594-8.
Asthma is related to triggers within the home. Although it is recognised that triggers likely occur due to characteristics of housing, these characteristics have not been comprehensively reviewed, and there is a paucity of housing-focused interventions to reduce asthma and asthma symptoms. Following five steps identified by Arksey and O'Malley, we conducted a scoping review of published evidence on the associations between asthma and housing characteristics. We searched three electronic databases (PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science), identifying 33 studies that met our inclusion criteria. Through an iterative approach, we identified nine housing characteristics relevant to asthma onset or exacerbation, categorised as relating to the surrounding environment (location), the house itself (dwelling), or to conditions inside the home (occupancy). We conceptualise these three levels through a housing typologies framework. This facilitates the mapping of housing characteristics, and visualises how they can cluster and overlap to exacerbate asthma or asthma symptoms. Of the three levels in our framework, associations between asthma and locational features were evidenced most clearly in the literature reviewed. Within this category, environmental pollutants (and particularly air pollutants) were identified as a potentially important risk factor for asthma. Studies concerning associations between dwelling features and occupancy features and asthma reported inconsistent results, highlighting the need for greater research in these areas. Interpreting housing-related asthma triggers through this framework paves the way for the identification and targeting of typologies of housing that might adversely affect asthma, thus addressing multiple characteristics in tandem rather than as isolated elements.
哮喘与家庭中的触发因素有关。虽然人们认识到,触发因素可能是由于住房的特点引起的,但这些特点尚未得到全面审查,而且也缺乏针对住房的干预措施来减少哮喘和哮喘症状。我们按照 Arksey 和 O'Malley 确定的五个步骤,对已发表的关于哮喘与住房特征之间关联的证据进行了范围综述。我们在三个电子数据库(PubMed、Scopus、Web of Science)中进行了检索,确定了 33 项符合纳入标准的研究。通过迭代方法,我们确定了与哮喘发作或恶化相关的九个住房特征,这些特征可分为与周围环境(位置)、房屋本身(住所)或房屋内条件(居住)相关的特征。我们通过住房类型学框架来理解这三个层次。这有助于对住房特征进行映射,并直观地显示它们如何聚类和重叠,从而加重哮喘或哮喘症状。在我们的框架的三个层次中,文献中最清楚地证明了哮喘与位置特征之间的关联。在这一类别中,环境污染物(特别是空气污染物)被确定为哮喘的一个潜在重要危险因素。关于住所特征和居住特征与哮喘之间关联的研究报告结果不一致,这突出表明需要在这些领域进行更多的研究。通过这一框架来解释与住房相关的哮喘触发因素,为确定和针对可能对哮喘产生不利影响的住房类型学铺平了道路,从而可以同时处理多个特征,而不是将其作为孤立的要素来处理。