| Literature DB >> 25885780 |
Katherine L Dickinson1,2, Ernest Kanyomse3, Ricardo Piedrahita4, Evan Coffey5, Isaac J Rivera6, James Adoctor7, Rex Alirigia8, Didier Muvandimwe9, MacKenzie Dove10, Vanja Dukic11, Mary H Hayden12, David Diaz-Sanchez13, Adoctor Victor Abisiba14, Dominic Anaseba15, Yolanda Hagar16, Nicholas Masson17, Andrew Monaghan18, Atsu Titiati19, Daniel F Steinhoff20, Yueh-Ya Hsu21, Rachael Kaspar22, Bre'Anna Brooks23, Abraham Hodgson24, Michael Hannigan25, Abraham Rexford Oduro26, Christine Wiedinmyer27.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cooking over open fires using solid fuels is both common practice throughout much of the world and widely recognized to contribute to human health, environmental, and social problems. The public health burden of household air pollution includes an estimated four million premature deaths each year. To be effective and generate useful insight into potential solutions, cookstove intervention studies must select cooking technologies that are appropriate for local socioeconomic conditions and cooking culture, and include interdisciplinary measurement strategies along a continuum of outcomes. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25885780 PMCID: PMC4336492 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-1414-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Causal pathways linking introduction of clean cookstoves to outcomes of interest.
Summary of measurements included in prior randomized cookstove intervention studies
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| RESPIRE/CRECER Highland Guatemala | [ | Collection of studies involved interventions with 500+ households using plancha improved stoves, gas stoves, and traditional (open fire) control groups | Quarterly stove use questionnaires; SUMs | Not measured in field | CO, PM2.5 | CO, TSP, PM10, PM3.5, PM2.5 | Blood pressure, acute illness (pneumonia), self-reported health symptoms | Not measured |
| Patsari/Michoacan, Mexico | [ | Collection of studies involved interventions with 600 households using Pastari (ICS) and traditional (open fires) control group | Monthly visits reporting stove use | Field cooking tests (KPTs, WBTs and CCTs) and lab testing (WBT) in addition to GHG emissions measurements | CO, PM2.5 | Kitchen/Indoor/Outdoor/Community Plaza for CO, PM2.5 | Spirometry tests to measure lung function, blood samples, and self-reported health symptoms | PM2.5 |
| Juntos and Barrick/ Peru | [ | Two Intervention Programs; Juntos National (A), Barrick Gold Corp. (B) with 57+ households using improved custom brick stoves and traditional (open fire) group for baseline | Questionnaire & time use diaries at enrollment and 3 weeks after stove installation | Not measured | CO, PM2.5 | Kitchen CO, PM2.5 | Hydroxylate PAH biomarkers from urine samples | Not measured |
| DelAgua EcoZoom/Rwanda | [ | 566 households in three villages; EcoZoom Dura stove vs traditional. Intervention also included water filters | Surveys measuring acceptability and stove use conducted monthly for five months; SUMs on subset of stoves | No field measurements in Rwanda intervention study, but field-based emissions testing using same stove conducted in Uganda [ | Not done in this study, but planned for follow-up | Kitchen PM2.5 | Not done in this study, but planned for follow-up | Not measured |
| Surya/Indo-Gangetic Plains | [ | Collection of studies involved interventions with 480+ households using a variety of improved biomass stoves, and traditional (mud/open fire) control groups | Surveys, Wireless Cookstove Sensing System (WiCS) (in development) | BC (Concentrations only) | Breathing zone BC | Kitchens/Outdoor BC and OC | Self-reported health symptoms | Regional BC and OC modeling |
| Ghana Sissala West | [ | Intervention of 500+ households using constructed mud/brick stove and traditional (open fire) control groups | Surveyed participants on cooking activity and fuel wood gathering, SUMs | Not measured | CO | Not measured | Self-reported health symptoms | Not measured |
| India | [ | Price experiment that tested 2 nontraditional cookstoves over 2,280 households. | Surveys used to access perceptions of stoves, health knowledge, socioeconomic status | Not Measured | Not Measured | Not Measured | Self-reported health symptoms | Not Measured |
| India | [ | 2,651 household intervention study subsidizing construction of inexpensive, locally-made mud stoves. Households responsible for providing mud, labor, and small payment for masonry and maintenance. Public lottery randomly assigned order of construction and distribution. | Three surveys in four years used to gauge stove usage, cooking activity, fuel expenditures, and perceptions about their efficacy | Not Measured | CO | Not Measured | Self-reported health symptoms, anthropometrics, spirometry tests to measure lung function | Not Measured |
| REACCTING, K-N District in Ghana | Work described here | 200 household intervention study. Two types of biomass stoves introduced. | Surveys and SUMs | Controlled cooking tests in field | CO, PM2.5 | CO and PM2.5 on a subset of homes | Biomarkers of inflammation from blood samples, anthropometrics, self-reported health questionnaires | Regional CO, NO, O3, and CO2 monitoring |
Figure 2Map of study area with cluster and health clinic locations.
Figure 3Monthly rainfall and temperature in Navrongo.
Figure 4Traditional and improved stove technologies being compared in the REACCTING study, shown with Stove Use Monitors (SUMs) attached. Top left: traditional three-stone stove. Top right: traditional charcoal stove. Bottom left: Philips Smokeless Stove, Made in Lesotho (Southern Africa), Cost: ~US$125. Bottom right: Gyapa Wood-Burning Stove. Made in Accra. Cost: ~US$15-25.
Figure 5E-Pod setup for measuring in-field stove emissions.