| Literature DB >> 17069654 |
James L Repace1, James N Hyde, Doug Brugge.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We quantified the air quality benefits of a smoke-free workplace law in Boston Massachusetts, U.S.A., by measuring air pollution from secondhand smoke (SHS) in 7 pubs before and after the law, comparing actual ventilation practices to engineering society (ASHRAE) recommendations, and assessing SHS levels using health and comfort indices.Entities:
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Substances:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17069654 PMCID: PMC1637107 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-6-266
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
7 Downtown Boston bar/restaurants where air quality was measured. Smoking was permitted in the bar areas under the existing Boston regulations during the April 18, 2003 measurements, and was banned when the October 17, 2003 measurements were made. The monitors' inlets were ~1 m from the floor for all measurements.
| A large "horseshoe" bar area dominates one large room. A small room opens out to the front. Bar caters to young singles clientele who gather after work. Food is also available but not central. Monitoring equipment was placed ~15 ft. from the bar against an outer wall in the bar area for both measurements. | |
| A long rectangular bar dominates this famous bar/restaurant. One large open room. Wide variety of patrons from young singles, older couples and some tourists. Monitoring equipment was positioned against a wall ~6 ft. from one end of the bar and ~10 ft. from the front door in a virtually identical position for both measurements. | |
| A large complex area dominated by a centrally located bar and stand-up eating area. This bar/restaurant is part of a chain well known for bar and traditional "pub-style" food. Patrons include both tourists and locals of diverse ages. On both occasions monitoring devices were placed in identical locations about 8 feet from the bar against a 5 ft. wall in the stand-up area. | |
| A noisy and crowded venue. Patrons are almost exclusively 20 to 30 year old singles who gather from late afternoon to late at night. Bar food is available and served throughout both in the bar area and smaller dining room. Monitors were placed ~20 ft. from the bar against a windowed wall during the first (April visit), and against the bar for the return (October) visit. | |
| A small, crowded, neighborhood bar/restaurant. The narrow bar area is ~15 ft. wide and ~40 ft. long with another ~20 ft. devoted to dining booths contiguous to the bar. Monitors were placed about 6 feet from the bar's middle against a wall in identical locations for each visit. | |
| Grilled and sizzling-hot ethnic food is the main attraction of this bar/restaurant. The bar is contiguous to dining area #1, and ~10 ft. distant and open to dining area #2. Monitors were placed adjacent to tables in dining area #1 in April, and in dining area #2 in October. | |
| Well-known upscale bar/restaurant chain frequented by both locals and tourists. The large rectangular raw shellfish bar area is separated from the main dining room by corridors but also has large dining tables encircling the bar. Monitors were placed against a wall adjacent to a dining table at ~12 ft. from the bar, and at adjacent tables for the two visits. | |
| 11th Floor Nonsmoking Rooms each visit, measurements made with open windows; hotel near Boston Garden Park. |
A(Venue numbers are keyed to Figures 1 and 2.)
April 18, 2003 Boston Indoor/Outdoor Pre-Ban Air Quality Survey Results
| 1600 | 13 | 589 | 78.3 (11.2) | 49 | 2.33 (0.58) | 2.98 | 8.93 | 197 (55) | 62 (23) | 0.40 | 1.4 | 1.86 (0.13) | 1100 | 7.9 | |
| 4550 | 12.83 | 1653 | 131 (34) | 29 | 0.5 (0.58) | 1.5 | 1.15 | 43 (23) | 6.4 (11.5) | 0.03 | 0.75 | 1.90 (0.14) | 680 | 29.1 | |
| 5041 | 11 | 1570 | 111 (51.2) | 22 | 3.67 (0.14) | 3.3 | 9.9 | 57 (49) | 38 (21) | 0.23 | 3.74 | 2.08 (0.06) | 800 | 15.3 | |
| 1440 | 10 | 408 | 98 (2.7) | 68 | 4.0 (1.73) | 4.08 | 12.2 | 338 (120) | 160 (59) | 0.98 | 1.98 | 2.47 (0.21) | 900 | 11.7 | |
| 900 | 7.5 | 191 | 54 (1.4) | 60 | 2.5 (0.71) | 4.63 | 13.9 | 323 (113) | 109 (68) | 1.31 | 2.78 | 2.77 (0.33) | 1480 | 5.0 | |
| 2037 | 9.58 | 552 | 40.8 (9.25) | 20 | 2.25 (0.5) | 5.51 | 16.5 | 308 (80) | 41.1 (68) | 0.41 | 0.91 | 5.50 (1.05) | 1150 | 7.4 | |
| 1655 | 9 | 422 | 43.5 (2.1) | 26 | 2.75 (0.5) | 6.32 | 19.0 | 117 (39) | 15.3 (9.0) | 0.65 | 4.23 | 1.89 (0.07) | 720 | 20.2 | |
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| - | 0 |
* 77 minute average (68 min before and 9 min after all Venue sampling); **73 minute average (65 min before, 8 min after sampling); (SD = standard deviations of measurments in parentheses; a(Ds in units of burning cigarettes per 100 m3);). c(Using Habitual Smoker Model of Repace & Lowrey (1985):assumes 2 cigarettes per smoker-hour & 1.43 mg RS)P/cig: ETS-RSP = 650 Ds/Cv);d(excluding RSP and PPAH values from Pub #6). b(Ave. of 3 measurements~ten minutes apart.) RH%: 25%–64%, mean 43.5% (9). T°C range: 12.7–20.9; mean 17.3 (2.3); e(Average minimum background outdoor CO2 value). f(average of all outdoor measurements); g(assumes Co = 473 ppm), h(On sidewalks; crossing streets).
Figure 1Measurements of respirable particle (RSP) and carcinogen pollution (PPAH) as a function of time before the Boston smoking ban on Friday, April 18, 2003 from 6 PM to 12 AM in 7 hospitality venues. Outdoor levels are indicated between the dotted lines showing the levels in each pub. Contrast with Figure 2.
Figure 3The regression of respirable particle pollution against carcinogen pollution in 6 of 7 Boston pubs studied before the smoking ban. Pub # 6 is excluded due to apparent contamination from kitchen fumes. The ratio for RSP/PPAH in the same units is about 2000:1. This is the same RSP/PPAH ratio found in the Wilmingon, Delaware study (Repace, 2004).
October 17, 2003 Boston Indoor/Outdoor Air Quality Survey Smoke-Free Results Post-Ban
| 1600 | 13 | 589 | 54.6 (1.15) | 34 | 7.47 (1.46) | 3.8 | 8.56 (4.99) | 13.8 | 1.04 (0.084) | 950 | 10.8 | |
| 4550 | 12.83 | 1653 | 99.3 (26) | 21.8 | 16.3 (4.75) | 38 | 1.61 (2.14) | 25.2 | 2.89 (0.37) | 900 | 12.1 | |
| 5041 | 11 | 1570 | 123 (20.6) | 24.4 | 1.39 (1.44) | 2.4 | 5.98 (13.7) | 15.7 | 1.30 (0.24) | 800 | 16.0 | |
| 1440 | 10 | 408 | 92.7 (22.5) | 64.4 | 6.26 (1.05) | 1.9 | 12.2 (5.13) | 7.6 | 0.82 (0.18) | 950 | 10.8 | |
| 900 | 7.5 | 191 | 69 (1.73) | 76.7 | 13.5 (3.16) | 4.2 | 7.45 (4.00) | 6.8 | 0.92 (0.09) | 940 | 11.0 | |
| 2037 | 9.58 | 552 | 50.3 (2.08) | 24.7 | 525 (274) | 170 | 1.55 (3.82) | 3.8 | 7.94 (1.48) | 1260 | 6.5 | |
| 1655 | 9 | 422 | 48.3 (11.0) | 29.0 | 1.49 (0.96) | 1.2 | 2.14 (1.24) | 14.0 | 0.48 (0.19) | 720 | 21.5 | |
| 1 | ||||||||||||
(SD = standard deviations of measurements in parentheses); *(91 min Ave., 68 min before venues, 23 min after); **(85 min Ave., 65 min before venues, 20 min after; a(excluding Pub #6). bAve. of 3 measurements~ten min apart;); c(Time-weighted mean). d(based on ASHRAE 62 formula); e(average minimum background); f(assumes Co = 487 ppm);g(assumes Co = 487 ppm); h(On sidewalks; crossing streets). Range in air temperature: 17.5 – 21.8°C, mean 19.8°C; range in relative humidity: 28%–48%, mean 38%.
Figure 2Measurements of RSP and PPAH as a function of time after the Boston smoking ban on Friday, October 17, 2003 from 6 PM to 12 AM in the same 7 hospitality venues shown in Figure 1. Pub #6 had high carbon monoxide levels before and after the ban; this was reported to Boston Public Health, whose investigation later disclosed this was due to fumes from a malfunctioning gas-fired deep fat fryer. Outdoor air pollution levels appear between the dotted lines bracketing the indoor levels in each pub.
Comparison of Pre-and-Post Ban RSP Levels with the Federal AQI.
| Pub #1 | 197 | VERY UNHEALTHY | 188 | 43 | 188 |
| Pub #2 | 43 | UNHEALTHY SENSITIVE GROUPS | 119 | 27 | 119 |
| Pub #3 | 57 | UNHEALTHY SENSITIVE GROUPS | 57 | 13 | 57 |
| Pub #4 | 338 | HAZARDOUS | 332 | 75 | 332 |
| Pub #5 | 323 | HAZARDOUS | 309 | 70 | 309 |
| Pub #6 | 308 | HAZARDOUS | -- | -- | -- |
| Pub #7 | 117 | UNHEALTHY | 116 | 26 | 116 |
| Mean All Venues | 198 | VERY UNHEALTHY | -- | -- | -- |
| Mean all but # 6 | 179 | VERY UNHEALTHY | 171 | 39 | 171 |
| Non-smoking Hotel Room | 6.45 | GOOD | NA | NA | NA |
| Outdoors/In Transit | 18.6 | MODERATE | NA | NA | NA |
a (Ratio of SHS-RSP in Col. 4 to Junker Irritation Threshold of 4.4 μg/m3). b(Ratio of SHS-RSP in Col. 4 to Junker Odor Threshold of 1 μg/m3). NA = not applicable.
Figure 4Pre-ban secondhand smoke respirable particulate, SHS-RSP, (total measured RSP – background RSP, B) in micrograms per cubic meter and SHS-PPAH concentration (total measured PPAH – background PPAH, B') in nanograms per cubic meter versus burning cigarette density Ds (active smokers observed per hundred cubic meters of space volume) and air exchange rate Cv in units of air changes per hour (ach) as calculated from RSP using the model of Repace (2005). The decay rates of PPAH are higher than for RSP. Background-subtraction values are arbitrarily chosen from measured open-window nonsmoking hotel room values. Data from Pub # 6 are omitted from this plot.
Levels of fine particulate (PM2.5) air pollution in units of micrograms per cubic meter ((μg/m3) and corresponding U.S. health advisory descriptors with accompanying simplified color code (USEPA, 1999).
| 0.0 – 15.4 | 0 – 50 | Good | Green |
| 15.5 – 40.4 | 51 – 100 | Moderate | Yellow |
| 40.5 – 65.4 | 101 – 150 | Unhealthy SG* | Orange |
| 65.5 – 150.4 | 151 – 200 | Unhealthy | Red |
| 150.5 – 250.4 | 201 – 300 | Very unhealthy | Violet |
| 250.5 – 350.4 | 301 – 400 | Hazardous | Maroon |
| 350.5 – 500.4 | 401 – 500 | Very Hazardous | Maroon |
| > 505 | 500 | (Significant Harm) | ** |
*SG = sensitive groups; **exists, but is not a part of the AQI as outdoor air never gets this polluted due to federal and state regulation and enforcement action (Ellsworth, 2005).