| Literature DB >> 35162876 |
Lisa Coulburn1, Wendy Miller1.
Abstract
In response to an Australian governmental inquiry into biotoxin-related illness, the purpose of this integrative review is to bring together the current state of evidence on the prevalence, risk factors and impacts related to mould-affected housing in an Australian context, in order to inform building, housing and health research, practice and policy. The robust integrative review methodology simultaneously sought quantitative and qualitative studies and grey literature from multiple disciplines, identifying only 45 studies directly relating to Australian housing and indoor mould. Twenty-one studies highlight negative health impacts relating to indoor residential mould, with asthma, respiratory, allergy conditions and emerging health concerns for chronic multiple-symptom presentation. The majority of studies reported risk factors for indoor mould including poor housing conditions, poor-quality rental accommodation, socioeconomic circumstance, age-related housing issues and concerns for surface/interstitial condensation and building defects in newer housing. Risks for indoor mould in both older and newer housing raise concerns for the extent of the problem of indoor mould in Australia. Understanding the national prevalence of housing risks and "root cause" associated with indoor mould is not conclusive from the limited existing evidence. Synthesis of this evidence reveals a lack of coverage on: (1) national and geographical representation, (2) climatical coverage, (3) housing typologies, (4) housing defects, (5) maintenance, (6) impact from urbanisation, and (7) occupant's behaviour. This integrative review was key in identifying emerging housing and health concerns, highlighting gaps in data and implications to be addressed by researchers, practice and policy and acts as a comprehensive holistic review process that can be applied to other countries.Entities:
Keywords: Australia; building characteristics; health; housing conditions; mold; mould; risk factors
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35162876 PMCID: PMC8835129 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19031854
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Source types and location of grey literature.
| Type of Grey Literature | Agency/Group | Website Link |
|---|---|---|
| Australian Government | Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) | |
| Australian Institute of Health Welfare (AIHW) | ||
| Australian Building Codes Board (ABCB) | ||
| Data Archive | Australian Data Archive (ADA) | |
| Advocacy websites | Housing advocacy group | |
| Environmental sensitivities advocacy group | ||
| Policy websites | Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute (AHURI) | |
| Analysis, Policy & Observatory |
Search terms by theme used for literature search.
| Place | Mould | Housing | Risk/Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | Mould | Hous *, House, Housing | Health |
| Fungi | Indoor | Well-being, Well-being | |
| Mildew | Home * | Cost * | |
| Condensation | Dwelling * | Impact * | |
| Flood * | Residen * | Hardship * | |
| “Water damage” | Residential | Economic * | |
| “Water damage” | Residence | Financial | |
| Damp * | Building * | Risk * | |
| Perception * |
* Used to capture permutations.
Study inclusion and exclusion criteria.
| Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
|---|---|
| Australian residential dwelling (detached and semi-detached single family homes, townhouses, units/apartments) | Houses or studies not based in Australia. Boarding houses or commercial buildings |
| Occupants (all ages), expert opinions or housing data (including biological) | Building computer modelling studies |
| Reports indoor mould/mildew/fungi | Does not report indoor mould/mildew/fungi |
| Data/information quantitative, qualitative, case studies relating to prevalence, risk factors or impact and reported indoor mould/mildew/fungi | No data or unclear |
| Any study design providing original data on housing conditions/occupants | Reviews and summaries based on secondary data |
| Full text available | Full text not available |
Summary of study characteristics n = 45.
| Study Details | Study Categories | Ref | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Geographical | Australia-wide | 7 (15.6%) | [ | |
| Victoria (VIC) | 12 (26.7%) | [ | ||
| New South Wales (NSW) | 8 (17.7%) | [ | ||
| Tasmania (TAS) | 5 (11.1%) | [ | ||
| Western Australia (WA) | 4 (8.8%) | [ | ||
| South Australia (SA) | 2 (4.4%) | [ | ||
| Queensland (QLD) | 1 (2.2%) | [ | ||
| Australian Capital Territory (ACT) | ||||
| Northern Territory (NT) | ||||
| Combinations: (VIC, TAS, NSW, QLD, SA, WA) | 4 (8.8%) | [ | ||
| Unknown | 2 (4.4%) | [ | ||
| Quantitative | Cohort Studies | 8 (17.8%) | [ | |
| Cross-Sectional Studies | 7 (15.6%) | [ | ||
| Case Control (houses) | 2 (4.4%) | [ | ||
| Intervention Study (houses) | 1 (2.2%) | [ | ||
| Quantitative | Prevalence Studies | 8 (17.8%) | [ | |
| Case Series (houses) | 3 (6.7%) | [ | ||
| Cohort Studies | 3 (6.7%) | [ | ||
| Cross-Sectional | 2 (4.4%) | [ | ||
| Case Report (human) | 1 (2.2%) | [ | ||
| Case Control (human) | 1 (2.2%) | [ | ||
| Mixed Methods Studies | Mixed Methods Studies | 2 (4.4%) | [ | |
| Building Industry Reports | 3 (6.7%) | [ | ||
| Qualitative Descriptive Studies 4 (8.9%) | Qualitative Descriptive Studies | 3 (6.7%) | [ | |
| Government Inquiry Report | 1 (2.2%) | [ | ||
| Study quality | Authority, Accuracy, Coverage, Objectivity, Date, Significance Checklist (AACODS) | Mixed Methods Assessment Tool (MMAT) | ||
| * | ||||
| ** | 1 (6.3%) | 2 (4.4%) | * | |
| *** | 1 (2.2%) | ** | ||
| **** | 6 (13.3%) | *** | ||
| ***** | 1 (6.3%) | 15 (33.3%) | **** | |
| ****** | 14 (87.5%) | 21 (46.7%) | ***** | |
Notes: ****** = 6 questions answered “Yes”, ***** = 5 questions answered “Yes”, **** = 4 questions answered “Yes”, *** = 3 questions answered “Yes”, ** = 2 questions answered “Yes”, * = 1 question answered “Yes”. The AACODS checklist had a total of 6 questions. The MMAT assessment tool had a total of 5 questions.
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) flowchart of search results.
Profile of the main study topics within the included studies.
| Study Topics | Number ( | Subtopics | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| Building characteristics | 19 (42.2%) | Indoor biological data | [ |
| Housing survey data | [ | ||
| Housing defects and “root cause” | [ | ||
| Indoor mould intervention | [ | ||
| Health | 14 (31.1%) | Asthma, allergy, respiratory | [ |
| Hypersensitivity pneumonitis | [ | ||
| Allergic alveolitis | [ | ||
| Other | [ | ||
| Housing conditions and socio-economic factors | 9 (20%) | Energy use and health | [ |
| Health | [ | ||
| Tenure | [ | ||
| COVID-19 insights and housing conditions | 2 (4.4%) | Mental health | [ |
| Renting | [ | ||
| Occupant behaviours | 1 (2.2%) | Hygiene practices and health | [ |
Figure 2Chronological distribution of reviewed studies by theme and data collection year.
Figure 3The geographical distribution of all included studies in relation to climate zones.
Climatical distribution of included studies reporting housing conditions or building characteristics by climate zones.
| Coverage of Climate Zones | Housing | Building | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ref | Ref | |||
| All climate zones | 1 (5.6%) | [ | ||
| 1—High humidity summer, warm winter | ||||
| 2—Warm humid summer, mild winter | ||||
| 3—Hot dry summer, warm winter | ||||
| 4—Hot dry summer, cool winter | ||||
| 5—Warm temperate | 1 (5.6%) | [ | ||
| 5/6—Warm/mild temperate | 2 (16.7%) | [ | 3 (16.7%) | [ |
| 6—Mild temperate | 3 (25%) | [ | 6 (33.3%) | [ |
| 7—Cool temperate | 3 (16.7%) | [ | ||
| 8—Alpine | ||||
| Unspecified study locations | 7 (58.3%) | [ | 4 (22.2%) | [ |
Figure 4The distribution of housing conditions and building characteristic studies in relation to average RH.
Relative humidity (RH) levels and risk of indoor mould/mildew/fungi concentrations.
| Categories | Climate Zone | Risk Factors for Residential Indoor Mould/Mildew/Fungi | Level of Association |
|---|---|---|---|
| Indoor | 5/6 | Hot walls compared to cooler room [ | Y |
| 5/6 | Bedroom relative humidity levels RH > 80% [ | Y | |
| 6 | High indoor humidity RH > 60% [ | Y * | |
| 6 | RH equal > 70% [ | Y * |
Notes: Y = Positive association reported, Y * = Significant association (p < 0.05).
Building characteristics and risk factors reported for indoor mould/mildew/increased fungi concentrations.
| Categories | Data Before 2002 | Data | Risk Factors for Residential Indoor Mould/Mildew/Fungi | Level of |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Housing conditions | ||||
| Housing conditions | x | Poor housing conditions [ | Y * | |
| x | Age of home >20 years (1992) [ | Y *, Y, Y * | ||
| x | x | Leaking roof/ceiling [ | Y, Y *, PY | |
| x | Water-damaged/collapsing wooden floorboards [ | Y *, Y * | ||
| Building characteristics—Building, design, construction | ||||
| Construction | x | Exposing building materials to moisture during construction [ | PY | |
| x | Building defects (various water/moisture/waterproofing related) [ | PY, Y | ||
| Building | x | Air-tightness in buildings, surface/interstitial condensation, thermal bridging, non-breathable wall wraps/foil wraps, unventilated walls [ | PY, Y | |
| x | Use of timber framing and/or gypsum board [ | PY | ||
| x | External walls adjoining unheated spaces [ | Y | ||
| Roof | x | Blocked gutters/incorrect gutter installation [ | PY | |
| Walls | x | Brick veneer [ | Y | |
| x | Double brick [ | Y *, Y | ||
| Foundation | x | Stumps [ | Y * | |
| Drainage | x | Inappropriate external drainage [ | PY | |
| Insulation | x | x | Limited or poorly installed insulation [ | Y *, Y |
| Building | x | Higher number of bedrooms or bathrooms [ | Y | |
| x | Airflow from bathrooms towards bedrooms [ | Y | ||
| x | Inadequate building orientation and lack of breezes [ | Y | ||
| Windows | x | Single glazed windows [ | Y | |
| x | Poorly ventilated areas behind curtains [ | Y | ||
| x | Lack of natural light [ | PY | ||
| x | Limited ventilation through open windows [ | Y * | ||
| Cooling/heating | x | Split-system air-conditioning units [ | Y, PY | |
| x | No solid fuel fire [ | Y * | ||
| x | Cold bedrooms [ | Y * | ||
| Ventilation/air flow | x | x | Inadequate ventilation [ | PY, Y, Y * |
| x | No bedroom ceiling fan, no kitchen exhaust fan, few extractor fans in wet areas [ | Y * | ||
| non-structural | x | Carpets without professional cleaning [ | Y | |
| x | Old carpets: 5 years or older [ | Y * | ||
Notes: PY = Perceived association, Y = Positive association reported, Y * = Significant association (p < 0.05).
Occupant behaviours and risk of indoor mould/mildew/fungi concentrations.
| Categories | Data Before 2002 | Data | Risk Factors for Residential Indoor Mould/Mildew/Fungi | Level of |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Occupant behaviours | ||||
| Ventilation | x | Windows left open [ | Y * | |
| x | Occupant unaware of their behaviours with condensation [ | PY | ||
| x | Occupant reluctant to open windows and doors due to energy costs [ | PY | ||
| x | Infrequent use of opening windows [ | Y * | ||
| x | Lack of opening windows [ | Y * | ||
| Cleaning | x | Unclean plastic seals on a dishwasher doors [ | Y * | |
| x | Failure to remove indoor mould growth [ | Y * | ||
| x | Homes cleaned less [ | Y * | ||
| Pets | x | Presence of 1 cat or presence of 1 dog [ | Y * | |
Notes: PY = Perceived association, Y = Positive association reported, Y * = Significant association (p < 0.05).
Figure 5Prevalence of reported indoor mould/mildew/fungi conditions within the included studies by climate zone and data year.
Findings of symptom outcomes reported in relation to dampness/mould/mildew/fungi indicators.
| Symptom/Illness | Sufficient Evidence for an Association by World Health Organization (WHO) [ | Association | ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Asthma | Asthma in children [ | Y * | 12 (26.7%) |
| Asthma [ | Qual | ||
| Current asthma [ | Y ** | ||
| Greater odds for an asthma attack in the last 12 months [ | Y * | ||
| Increase in Peak Flow Variability (PFV) in asthmatics sensitised to fungi [ | Y * | ||
| Exacerbation of asthma [ | Qual | ||
| Wheeze | Wheeze [ | Y ** | |
| Increase in wheeze [ | Y | ||
| Cough | Cough [ | Qual | |
| Respiratory | Acute respiratory illness with cough (ARIwC) in children [ | Y | |
| Respiratory symptoms in children [ | Y * | ||
| Respiratory problems/conditions [ | Qual | ||
| Nocturnal chest tightness [ | Y ** | ||
| Increased bronchial hyperreactivity (BHR) [ | Y * | ||
| Clinical | Domestic allergic alveolitis [ | Y * | |
| Hypersensitivity pneumonitis [ | Y | ||
|
| |||
| Allergy | Allergy in children [ | Y * | 7 (15.6%) |
| Increase in allergy to fungi [ | Y | ||
| Protective—Lower risk of allergy to fungi [ | Y | ||
| Pollen and dust mite allergy [ | Qual | ||
| Atopy | Atopy in children [ | Y * | |
| Increase in atopy [ | Y * | ||
| Gastrointestinal | Gastrointestinal infections in children [ | Y * | |
| Mood/depression | Depression [ | Y | |
| Sadness/depression [ | Qual | ||
| Pain | Joint pain [ | Qual | |
|
| |||
| Comorbidity | Biotoxin illness reported with multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS) [ | Y | 5 (11.1%) |
| Biotoxin illness reported with tick-borne illness [ | Y | ||
| ME/CFS | Moulds as a trigger for myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) [ | Y | |
| Biotoxin illness reported with ME/CFS [ | Y | ||
| Multiple-symptom presentation | Chronic fatigue, pain, memory and concentration problems, disorientation, insomnia, gastrointestinal issues, sinus issues, fever, headaches and respiratory issues [ | Qual | |
| Fatigue, bronchial complaints, hay fever, headaches, hyperactivity, hypersensitivity or allergy, mood change, sensitivity to foods, water and textiles, sinus complaints, loss of sense of smell, pollen and dust mite allergy, skin complaints (eczema, itching, inflammation) [ | Qual |
Notes: Qual = Perceived association, Y = Positive association reported, Y * = Significant association (p < 0.05), Y ** = Significant association (p < 0.001).