| Literature DB >> 35457618 |
Rehana Shrestha1,2, Klaus Telkmann2, Benjamin Schüz1,2, Pramesh Koju3, Reshma Shrestha4, Biraj Karmacharya3, Gabriele Bolte1,2.
Abstract
Individuals' perceived fairness or justice beliefs are related to health in numerous ways. However, environment justice research to date has given little attention to perceived fairness of environmental exposures as experienced by individuals. This study explored the feasibility of a bottom-up digital participatory (via mobile phones) approach using ecological momentary assessment (EMA) to capture individuals' subjective experience of environmental exposures and the subjective evaluation of fairness by those affected in the context of Nepal. In total, 22 individuals participated in the study for 28 days. The results show high rates of study retention and adherence. Individuals' justice perception was found to vary within and between individuals, but also substantially depending on the types of environmental exposures. Nevertheless, the study indicates that uncertainties are inevitable as study design and timing may conflict participants' daily lives and priorities. The method allows us to consider multiple geographic contexts of individuals' everyday lives beyond residential environment. This pilot study proved the possibility to assess perceptions of environmental justice issues and demonstrated the necessary steps to using digital participatory method for assessing subjective perception of fairness of individuals.Entities:
Keywords: ecological momentary assessment; environmental exposure; environmental inequalities; perceived fairness; smartphone
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35457618 PMCID: PMC9024717 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19084752
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Characteristics of participants.
| Characteristics | Sub-Categories |
| % |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Male | 13 | 59 |
| Female | 9 | 41 | |
| Education | Bachelor’s education (ongoing) | 17 | 77 |
| Master’s education (ongoing) | 5 | 23 | |
| Academic discipline | Health | 10 | 45 |
| Engineering | 12 | 55 | |
| Current place of living | Urban Municipality | 21 | 95 |
| Rural Municipality | 1 | 5 | |
| Household income | Low | 4 | 18 |
| Medium | 13 | 59 | |
| High | 5 | 23 |
Adherence to EMA prompts (N = 22) by event contingent and fixed time.
| Prompt Type | Abandoned a ( | Missed b | Mismatched c | Location | Images | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Event contingent (self-assessments) | 21 (2.0%) | N/A | 39 (3.8%) | 793 (94.9%) | 625 (74.8%) | 1040 (including abandoned), |
| 1019 (excluding abandoned), | ||||||
| (C = 836, P = 183) | ||||||
| Time-contingent (control question) | N/A | 53 (9.0%) | N/A | N/A | N/A | 616 |
a Initiated the entry but not completed; b Missed answering time contingent question; c Mismatch between EMA submits and fixed time; C = current exposure; P = past exposure; N/A = Not applicable.
Variability of adherence across aspects of adherence.
| Prompt Type | Subcategory | Mean | Median | SD | Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Event contingent (self-assessment) | Days of interaction a | 19.8 | 22 | 6.49 | 2–28 |
| Interaction continuity b | 5.7 | 5 | 5.7 | 1–28 | |
| Self-assessment | 46.3 | 41.5 | 35.12 | 2–174 | |
| Abandoned c | 2% | 0% | 3% | 0–9% | |
| Mismatched d | 1.8 | 1.0 | 2.2 | 0–9 | |
| Location submits | 93% | 99% | 13% | 46–100% | |
| Image submits | 74% | 80% | 29% | 0–100% | |
| Time contingent (control question) | Missed e | 2.4 | 1.5 | 2.8 | 0–11 |
a No of days with at least one record; b No of adjacent days with EMA entries from the day of first entry until first break; c Initiated the entry but not completed; d Mismatch between EMA submits and fixed time; e Missed answering time contingent question.
Figure 1Number of participants who reported various types and sources of exposures.
Figure 2Frequency of exposures reported across various types and sources of exposures. Note: In Figure 1 and Figure 2, only those sub-categories for which there are reported exposures are presented and some of those subcategories within the same categories are grouped together due to few reported exposures.
Figure 3Distribution of reported exposures on (a) to what degree they are perceived to have effects on oneself; (b) to what degree they are perceived to have effects on oneself as compared to others.
Figure 4Distribution of reported exposures on (a) to what degree they are perceived to be fair as compared to others; (b) to what degree they are perceived to be fairly distributed in respective municipality.
Intraclass correlation coefficients on subjective concerns and subjective perception on fairness.
| Dependent Variable | Intraclass Correlation Coefficients and 95% Confidence Intervals |
|---|---|
| Perceived effects due to exposures | 0.327 [0.177, 0.462] |
| Perceived effects as compared to others | 0.100 [0.038, 0.173] |
| Perceived fairness of exposures as compared to others | 0.325 [0.175, 0.450] |
| Perceived fairness of distribution of exposures in respective municipality | 0.505 [0.324, 0.637] |
Figure 5Estimates and 95% confidence intervals across five environmental exposures for (a) perceived effects due to exposures, (b) perceived effects as compared to others, (c) perceived fairness of exposures as compared to others, and (d) perceived fairness of distribution of exposures in municipality.
Figure 6(a) Distribution of reported exposures on whether participants perceived to have control on those exposures; (b) estimated probabilities of participants and 95% CIs on reporting positive controllability across various environmental types.
Figure 7Distribution of reported exposures across (a) momentary perceived life satisfaction; (b) momentary perceived mood; (c) momentary perceived health status.
Intraclass correlation coefficients on momentary mood, life satisfaction and health status.
| Dependent Variable | Intraclass Correlation Coefficients and 95% Confidence Intervals |
|---|---|
| Momentary perceived life satisfaction | 0.614 [0.430, 0.734] |
| Momentary perceived mood | 0.530 [0.345, 0.667] |
| Momentary perceived health status | 0.663 [0.484, 0.775] |
Before and after change in perceived effects across various types and sources of environmental factors.
| Environmental Factors | Diff of Mean | Sig. Test | Environmental Factors | Diff of Mean | Sig. Test |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| ||||
|
Road traffic | −0.71 |
|
Litter or rubbish on the streets | −0.23 | 0.387 |
|
Air traffic | −0.73 |
|
Animal excreta | 0 | 0.903 |
|
Construction works | −0.50 |
|
Urine | −0.27 | 0.243 |
|
Industry/commercial areas | −0.19 | 0.430 |
Vandalism | −0.48 | 0.117 |
|
|
Derelict or dilapidates buildings | −0.32 | 0.323 | ||
|
Industry | −0.55 | 0.062 |
| ||
|
Sewerage system | −0.82 |
|
Green spaces | −0.23 | 0.396 |
|
Solid waste (garbage, trash) | −0.52 |
|
Proximity to facilities | −0.36 | 0.131 |
|
|
Playground | 0.14 | 0.536 | ||
|
Industry | −0.52 | 0.074 |
Public transport infrastructures | −0.27 | 0.355 |
|
Road traffic | −0.14 | 0.650 |
Cycle paths | 0.14 | 0.496 |
|
Road dust | −0.05 | 0.941 |
Narrow sidewalks | 0 | 0.948 |
|
Brick kiln | −0.50 | 0.137 |
Street lamps | 0.27 | 0.392 |
|
Biomass | −0.36 | 0.12 |
Note: Bold indicates significance at p < 0.05.