Literature DB >> 18972306

Efficacy of an outdoor air pollution education program in a community at risk for asthma morbidity.

Samuel Dorevitch1, Abhijay Karandikar, Gregory F Washington, Geraldine Penny Walton, Renate Anderson, Leslie Nickels.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Asthma management guidelines recommend avoiding exposure to indoor and outdoor air pollutants. A limitation of such recommendations is that they do not provide information about how the public should obtain and act on air quality information. Although the Air Quality Index (AQI) provides simplified outdoor air quality forecasts, communities with high rates of asthma morbidity tend to have low rates of internet access due to factors such as low socioeconomic status. Assessments of knowledge about air quality among low-income minority communities are lacking, as are community-based programs to educate the public about using the AQI.
METHODS: An air quality education program and system for disseminating air quality information were developed to promote pollutant avoidance during the reconstruction of a major highway in a low-income minority community on Chicago's South Side. The program, which centered on workshops run by community asthma educators, was evaluated using a pre-test, post-test, and 1-year follow-up questionnaire.
RESULTS: A total of 120 community workshop participants completed at least a portion of the evaluation process. At baseline, knowledge about air quality was limited. Following the workshops, substantial increases were noted in rates of correct answers to questions about health effects of air pollution, the availability of air quality information, and the color code for an AQI category. Approximately 1 year after the workshops were held, few participants could recall elements of the training. Few participants have internet access, and alternative means of distributing air quality information were suggested by study participants.
CONCLUSIONS: Baseline knowledge of air quality information was limited in the community studied. Air quality education workshops conducted by community educators can increase knowledge about outdoor air quality and its impact on health over the short term. Refresher workshops or other efforts to sustain the knowledge increase may be useful. Given the known short-term and long-term effects of air quality on morbidity and mortality, air quality education efforts should be further developed, evaluated, and promoted for the general public, for people with underlying cardiopulmonary disease, and given the documented health disparities within the general population, for low-income and minority communities.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18972306     DOI: 10.1080/02770900802339759

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Asthma        ISSN: 0277-0903            Impact factor:   2.515


  2 in total

Review 1.  Individual-level interventions to reduce personal exposure to outdoor air pollution and their effects on people with long-term respiratory conditions.

Authors:  Sadia Janjua; Pippa Powell; Richard Atkinson; Elizabeth Stovold; Rebecca Fortescue
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2021-08-09

2.  Knowledge and Practice of Asthmatic Children's Parents About Daily Air Quality.

Authors:  Taraneh Yazdanparast; Seyed Mohammad Seyedmehdi; Soheila Khalilzadeh; Sousan Salehpour; Mohammad Reza Boloursaz; Nooshin Baghaie; Maryam Hassanzad; Ali Akbar Velayati
Journal:  Tanaffos       Date:  2013
  2 in total

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