| Literature DB >> 34065347 |
Sandy Shergill1,2,3, Lindsay Forsman-Phillips1, Anne-Marie Nicol1,2,4.
Abstract
Radon, a known carcinogen, becomes a health risk when it accumulates inside buildings. Exposure is of particular concern for children, as their longer life expectancy increases their lifetime risk of developing cancer. In 2016, 5.5 million students were enrolled in Canadian elementary and secondary schools. With no national policy on radon testing in schools, children may be at risk from radon exposure while attending school and school-based programs. This study explored radon testing efforts in publicly funded Canadian schools and summarizes where testing programs have occurred. Radon testing in schools was identified through a systematic qualitative enquiry, surveying members from different levels of government (health and education) and other stakeholders (school boards, research experts, among others). Overall, this research found that approaches to radon testing varied considerably by province and region. Responsibility for radon testing in schools was often deferred between government, school boards, building managers and construction parties. Transparency around radon testing, including which schools had been tested and whether radon levels had been mitigated, also emerged as an issue. Radon testing of schools across Canada, including mitigation and clear communication strategies, needs to improve to ensure a healthy indoor environment for staff and students.Entities:
Keywords: Canada; air pollutants; environment; radon; schools
Year: 2021 PMID: 34065347 PMCID: PMC8160764 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18105469
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Survey questions sent to gatekeepers.
| Question | |
|---|---|
| 1 | How many schools were tested for radon and when? Additionally, please include any related details, what rooms were tested and available testing results. |
| 2 | Has there been any remediation where levels were reported above the current Canadian radon guideline? (If testing has been previously conducted). |
| 3 | If applicable, are there any current programs that monitor how often schools should follow up and test again for radon? |
| 4 | What was the level of engagement during testing and result communication by staff, teachers and parents? |
| 5 | How much was financially invested into the testing efforts by the province or school district? |
Figure 1Data collection method and response rates for each level of knowledge gatekeepers.
Figure 2Summary of results by province for Canadian schools reporting radon testing.