Exposure Of Pregnant Women To Cookstove-Related Household Air Pollution In Urban And Periurban Trujillo, Peru

ARCHIVES OF ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH(2015)

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摘要
Although evidence suggests associations between maternal exposure to air pollution and adverse birth outcomes, pregnant women's exposure to household air pollution in developing countries is understudied. Personal exposures of pregnant women (N = 100) in Trujillo, Peru, to air pollutants and their indoor concentrations were measured. The effects of stove-use-related characteristics and ambient air pollution on exposure were determined using mixed-effects models. Significant differences in 48-hour kitchen concentrations of particulate matter (PM2.5), carbon monoxide (CO), and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) concentrations were observed across fuel types (p < 0.05). Geometric mean PM2.5 concentrations where 112 mu g/m(3) (confidence limits [CLs]: 52, 242 mu g/m(3)) and 42 mu g/m(3) (21, 82 mu g/m(3)) in homes where wood and gas were used, respectively. PM2.5 exposure was at levels that recent exposure-response analyses suggest may not result in substantial reduction in health risks even in homes where cleaner burning gas stoves were used.
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关键词
pregnant women, biomass, household air pollution, volatile organic compounds, nitrogen dioxide, carbon monoxide, cookstove
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