Indoor air pollution in developing countries: a major environmental and public health challenge.

Around 50% of people, almost all in developing countries, rely on coal and biomass in the form of wood, dung and crop residues for domestic energy. These materials are typically burnt in simple stoves with very incomplete combustion. Consequently, women and young children are exposed to high levels of indoor air pollution every day. There is consistent evidence that indoor air pollution increases the risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and of acute respiratory infections in childhood, the most important cause of death among children under 5 years of age in developing countries. Evidence also exists of associations with low birth weight, increased infant and perinatal mortality, pulmonary tuberculosis, nasopharyngeal and laryngeal cancer, cataract, and, specifically in respect of the use of coal, with lung cancer. Conflicting evidence exists with regard to asthma. All studies are observational and very few have measured exposure directly, while a substantial proportion have not dealt with confounding. As a result, risk estimates are poorly quantified and may be biased. Exposure to indoor air pollution may be responsible for nearly 2 million excess deaths in developing countries and for some 4% of the global burden of disease. Indoor air pollution is a major global public health threat requiring greatly increased efforts in the areas of research and policy-making. Research on its health effects should be strengthened, particularly in relation to tuberculosis and acute lower respiratory infections. A more systematic approach to the development and evaluation of interventions is desirable, with clearer recognition of the interrelationships between poverty and dependence on polluting fuels.

[1]  J. Samet,et al.  Indoor air pollution in developing countries and acute lower respiratory infections in children , 2000, Thorax.

[2]  Daniel M. Kammen,et al.  Comparison of Emissions and Residential Exposure from Traditional and Improved Cookstoves in Kenya , 2000 .

[3]  G J Keeler,et al.  Domestic biomass fuel combustion and chronic bronchitis in two rural Bolivian villages , 1999, Thorax.

[4]  Robert D. Retherford,et al.  Biomass cooking fuels and prevalence of blindness in India. , 1999 .

[5]  R. A. Rasmussen,et al.  Carbon monoxide from cookstoves in developing countries: 2. Exposure potentials , 1999 .

[6]  M Bobak,et al.  Pregnancy outcomes and outdoor air pollution: an ecological study in districts of the Czech Republic 1986-8. , 1999, Occupational and environmental medicine.

[7]  R. Albalak,et al.  Assessment of PM10 Concentrations from Domestic Biomass Fuel Combustion in Two Rural Bolivian Highland Villages , 1999 .

[8]  M. Decramer,et al.  Regulation of mucociliary clearance in health and disease. , 1999, The European respiratory journal.

[9]  P. Whelton,et al.  Passive smoking and the risk of coronary heart disease--a meta-analysis of epidemiologic studies. , 1999, The New England journal of medicine.

[10]  K. R. Smith,et al.  Biomass cooking fuels and prevalence of tuberculosis in India. , 1999, International journal of infectious diseases : IJID : official publication of the International Society for Infectious Diseases.

[11]  B. Björkstén The environmental influence on childhood asthma , 1999, Allergy.

[12]  D. Loomis,et al.  Air pollution and infant mortality in Mexico City. , 1999, Epidemiology.

[13]  R. Burnett,et al.  Effects of particulate and gaseous air pollution on cardiorespiratory hospitalizations. , 1999, Archives of environmental health.

[14]  B. Ritz,et al.  The effect of ambient carbon monoxide on low birth weight among children born in southern California between 1989 and 1993. , 1999, Environmental health perspectives.

[15]  J Schwartz,et al.  Air pollution and hospital admissions for heart disease in eight U.S. counties. , 1998, Epidemiology.

[16]  B. Hopkins,et al.  Evidence for an association between environmental tobacco smoke exposure and birthweight: a meta-analysis and new data. , 1999, Paediatric and perinatal epidemiology.

[17]  J. Pintos,et al.  Use of wood stoves and risk of cancers of the upper aero-digestive tract: a case-control study. , 1998, International journal of epidemiology.

[18]  Ken R. Smith,et al.  Emissions and efficiency of improved woodburning cookstoves in Highland Gatemala , 1998 .

[19]  Smoke-induced airway hyperresponsiveness to inhaled wood smoke in guinea pigs: tachykininergic and cholinergic mechanisms. , 1998, Life sciences.

[20]  Dai Lin The development and prospective of bioenergy technology in China , 1998 .

[21]  E. Boy,et al.  Indoor biofuel air pollution and respiratory health: the role of confounding factors among women in highland Guatemala. , 1998, International journal of epidemiology.

[22]  S. Bhardwaj,et al.  Primary bronchogenic carcinoma: clinical profile of 279 cases from mid-west Rajasthan. , 1998, The Indian journal of chest diseases & allied sciences.

[23]  D. Strachan,et al.  Parental smoking and childhood asthma: longitudinal and case-control studies , 1998 .

[24]  D. Strachan,et al.  Health effects of passive smoking .5. Parental smoking and allergic sensitisation in children. , 1998, Thorax.

[25]  D. Strachan,et al.  Health effects of passive smoking. 4. Parental smoking, middle ear disease and adenotonsillectomy in children. , 1998, Thorax.

[26]  P. Engle,et al.  Smoke Exposure of Women and Young Children in Highland Guatemala: Prediction and Recall Accuracy , 1997 .

[27]  Anthony Costello,et al.  Integrated management of childhood illness , 1997, The Lancet.

[28]  A. Ellegård Tears while cooking: an indicator of indoor air pollution and related health effects in developing countries. , 1997, Environmental research.

[29]  T J Woodruff,et al.  The relationship between selected causes of postneonatal infant mortality and particulate air pollution in the United States. , 1997, Environmental health perspectives.

[30]  Alan D. Lopez,et al.  Global mortality, disability, and the contribution of risk factors: Global Burden of Disease Study , 1997, The Lancet.

[31]  Xiping Xu,et al.  Association between air pollution and low birth weight: a community-based study. , 1997, Environmental health perspectives.

[32]  G. Redding,et al.  Indoor risk factors for asthma and wheezing among Seattle school children. , 1997, Environmental health perspectives.

[33]  H. Sepúlveda,et al.  Acute respiratory illnesses in the first 18 months of life. , 1996, Revista panamericana de salud publica = Pan American journal of public health.

[34]  R. Albalak Cultural practices and exposure to particulate pollution from indoor biomass cooking : effects on respiratory health and nutritional status among the Aymara Indians of the Bolivian highlands , 1997 .

[35]  E. Saltó,et al.  Passive smoking and risk of pulmonary tuberculosis in children immediately following infection. A case-control study. , 1996, Tubercle and lung disease : the official journal of the International Union against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease.

[36]  L. Moulton,et al.  Wood-burning stoves and lower respiratory illnesses in Navajo children. , 1996, The Pediatric infectious disease journal.

[37]  I. Onorato,et al.  The association between occupation and tuberculosis. A population-based survey. , 1996, American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine.

[38]  A. Ellegård,et al.  Cooking fuel smoke and respiratory symptoms among women in low-income areas in Maputo. , 1996, Environmental health perspectives.

[39]  B. Greenwood,et al.  A study of risk factors for pneumococcal disease among children in a rural area of west Africa. , 1996, International journal of epidemiology.

[40]  Zhang,et al.  Occupational and Environmental Risk Factors for Asthma in Rural Communities in China. , 1996, International journal of occupational and environmental health.

[41]  T. Nicolai,et al.  Relation of indoor heating with asthma, allergic sensitisation, and bronchial responsiveness: survey of children in South Bavaria , 1996, BMJ.

[42]  J. Morales,et al.  Primary lung cancer in Mexico city: a report of 1019 cases. , 1996, Lung cancer.

[43]  N. Gharaibeh Effects of indoor air pollution on lung function of primary school children in Jordan. , 1996, Annals of tropical paediatrics.

[44]  D. Srinivasa,et al.  Effect of indoor air pollution on the respiratory system of women using different fuels for cooking in an urban slum of Pondicherry. , 1996, The National medical journal of India.

[45]  W. Loening,et al.  Assessment and 2-year follow-up of some factors associated with severity of respiratory infections in early childhood. , 1996, South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde.

[46]  Y. Gao,et al.  Risk factors for lung cancer among nonsmokers with emphasis on lifestyle factors. , 1996, Lung cancer.

[47]  D. Maldonado,et al.  Woodsmoke exposure and risk for obstructive airways disease among women. , 1996, Chest.

[48]  J. Chuang,et al.  Human exposure and dosimetry of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in urine from Xuan Wei, China with high lung cancer mortality associated with exposure to unvented coal smoke. , 1995, Carcinogenesis.

[49]  J. Hashim,et al.  The relationship between prevalence of asthma and environmental factors in rural households. , 1995, The Medical journal of Malaysia.

[50]  B. Henderson,et al.  Previous lung disease and risk of lung cancer among lifetime nonsmoking women in the United States. , 1995, American journal of epidemiology.

[51]  Donna M. Hanson,et al.  WORLD RESOURCES: A GUIDE TO THE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT , 1995 .

[52]  R. Ruffin,et al.  The prevalence of respiratory symptoms in South Australian preschool children. II. Factors associated with indoor air quality , 1995, Journal of paediatrics and child health.

[53]  L. Ng'ang'a,et al.  Home environment and asthma in Kenyan schoolchildren: a case-control study. , 1995, Thorax.

[54]  B. Azizi,et al.  Indoor air pollution and asthma in hospitalized children in a tropical environment. , 1995, The Journal of asthma : official journal of the Association for the Care of Asthma.

[55]  A. Menezes,et al.  Prevalence and risk factors for chronic bronchitis in Pelotas, RS, Brazil: a population-based study. , 1994, Thorax.

[56]  D. Balasubramanian,et al.  Oxidative damage to the eye lens caused by cigarette smoke and fuel smoke condensates. , 1994, Indian journal of biochemistry & biophysics.

[57]  M. Døssing,et al.  Risk factors for chronic obstructive lung disease in Saudi Arabia. , 1994, Respiratory medicine.

[58]  N. Shah,et al.  Risk factors for severe pneumonia in children in south Kerala: a hospital-based case-control study. , 1994, Journal of tropical pediatrics.

[59]  B. Kirkwood,et al.  Risk factors for pneumonia among children in a Brazilian metropolitan area. , 1994, Pediatrics.

[60]  Michael G. Apte,et al.  Air pollution and the energy ladder in asian cities , 1994 .

[61]  Qu Ka Domestic smoke pollution and prevalence of chronic bronchitis/asthma in a rural area of Kashmir. , 1994 .

[62]  P. Cinaz,et al.  Effects of indoor environmental factors on respiratory systems of children. , 1994, Journal of tropical pediatrics.

[63]  D. Behera,et al.  Ventilatory function in nonsmoking rural Indian women using different cooking fuels. , 1994, Respiration; international review of thoracic diseases.

[64]  K. A. Qureshi Domestic smoke pollution and prevalence of chronic bronchitis/asthma in a rural area of Kashmir. , 1994, The Indian journal of chest diseases & allied sciences.

[65]  D. Marchant,et al.  Risk factors. , 1994, Obstetrics and gynecology clinics of North America.

[66]  J. Samet The epidemiology of lung cancer. , 1993, Chest.

[67]  A. de Francisco,et al.  Risk factors for mortality from acute lower respiratory tract infections in young Gambian children. , 1993, International journal of epidemiology.

[68]  K. K. Dutta,et al.  Histomorphological changes in lung of rats following exposure to wood smoke. , 1993, Indian journal of experimental biology.

[69]  J. Sandoval,et al.  Pulmonary arterial hypertension and cor pulmonale associated with chronic domestic woodsmoke inhalation. , 1993, Chest.

[70]  A. Hightower,et al.  Risk factors for deaths in children under 5 years old in Bagamoyo district, Tanzania. , 1992, Tropical medicine and parasitology : official organ of Deutsche Tropenmedizinische Gesellschaft and of Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Technische Zusammenarbeit.

[71]  S. West Does smoke get in your eyes? , 1992, JAMA.

[72]  Sumeet Saksena,et al.  Patterns of daily exposure to TSP and CO in the Garhwal Himalaya , 1992 .

[73]  W. Adérele,et al.  The association of household pollutants and socio-economic risk factors with the short-term outcome of acute lower respiratory infections in hospitalized pre-school Nigerian children. , 1992, Annals of tropical paediatrics.

[74]  H. Saiyed,et al.  Non-occupational pneumoconiosis at high altitude villages in central Ladakh. , 1991, British journal of industrial medicine.

[75]  J. Heady,et al.  Domestic pollution and respiratory illness in a Himalayan village. , 1991, International journal of epidemiology.

[76]  H. Campbell,et al.  Indoor air pollution exposure and lower respiratory infections in young Gambian children. , 1991, International journal of epidemiology.

[77]  E. Bateman,et al.  Hut lung: a domestically acquired pneumoconiosis of mixed aetiology in rural women. , 1991, Thorax.

[78]  B. Corrin,et al.  Silicosis in a Himalayan village population: role of environmental dust. , 1991, Thorax.

[79]  S. Yadav,et al.  Carboxyhaemoglobin in women exposed to different cooking fuels. , 1991, Thorax.

[80]  A. Pathania,et al.  Bronchitis due to Biomass Fuel Burning in North India: “Gujjar Lung,” an Extreme Effect , 1991 .

[81]  G E Daigler,et al.  The effect of indoor air pollutants on otitis media and asthma in children , 1991, The Laryngoscope.

[82]  D. Mavalankar,et al.  Levels and risk factors for perinatal mortality in Ahmedabad, India , 1991, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[83]  K. R. Smith,et al.  Indoor air pollution in developing countries. , 1990, World health statistics quarterly. Rapport trimestriel de statistiques sanitaires mondiales.

[84]  I. D. Johnston,et al.  What causes cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis? A case-control study of environmental exposure to dust. , 1990, BMJ.

[85]  M. Weissenbacher,et al.  Epidemiologic risk factors for children with acute lower respiratory tract infection in Buenos Aires, Argentina: a matched case-control study. , 1990, Reviews of infectious diseases.

[86]  S. Sithole,et al.  Indoor Woodsmoke Pollution Causing Lower Respiratory Disease in Children , 1990, Tropical doctor.

[87]  Paul J. Lioy,et al.  Assessing total human exposure to contaminants. A multidisciplinary approach , 1990 .

[88]  S. Nesnow,et al.  Mouse skin tumorigenicity studies of indoor coal and wood combustion emissions from homes of residents in Xuan Wei, China with high lung cancer mortality. , 1990, Carcinogenesis.

[89]  J. Harding India-US case-control study of age-related cataracts. , 1990, Archives of ophthalmology.

[90]  D. K. Craig,et al.  Effects of mainstream and environmental tobacco smoke on the immune system in animals and humans: a review. , 1990, Critical reviews in toxicology.

[91]  J. Coulehan,et al.  Wood-burning stoves and lower respiratory tract infection in American Indian children. , 1990, American journal of diseases of children.

[92]  L. Kowalski,et al.  Risk factors for oral cancer in Brazil: A case‐control study , 1989, International journal of cancer.

[93]  P. Byass,et al.  INDOOR AIR POLLUTION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES AND ACUTE RESPIRATORY INFECTION IN CHILDREN , 1989, The Lancet.

[94]  R. Neupane,et al.  Domestic smoke pollution and acute respiratory infections in a rural community of the hill region of Nepal , 1989 .

[95]  S. Malik,et al.  Blood carboxyhaemoglobin levels following acute exposure to smoke of biomass fuel. , 1988, The Indian journal of medical research.

[96]  H. R. Anderson,et al.  Prospective study of mortality associated with chronic lung disease and smoking in Papua New Guinea. , 1988, International journal of epidemiology.

[97]  J. Lodge Air quality guidelines for Europe: WHO regional publications, European series, No. 23, World Health Organization, 1211 Geneva 27, Switzerland; WHO publications center USA, 49 Sheridan Avenue, Albany, NY 12210, 1987, xiii + 426 pp. price: Sw. fr. 60 , 1988 .

[98]  Kirk R. Smith,et al.  Indoor Smoke Exposures from Traditional and Improved Cookstoves: Comparisons among Rural Nepali Women , 1986 .

[99]  J. Samet,et al.  Personal and family history of respiratory disease and lung cancer risk. , 1986, The American review of respiratory disease.

[100]  R. W. Armstrong,et al.  Epidemiology of nasopharyngeal carcinoma in Malaysia and Hong Kong. , 1985, National Cancer Institute monograph.

[101]  M. Pandey,et al.  Domestic smoke pollution and respiratory function in rural Nepal. , 1985, The Tokai journal of experimental and clinical medicine.

[102]  Malik Sk Exposure to domestic cooking fuels and chronic bronchitis. , 1985 .

[103]  K. R. Smith,et al.  Biomass fuel combustion and health. , 1985, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[104]  S. Malik Exposure to domestic cooking fuels and chronic bronchitis. , 1985, The Indian journal of chest diseases & allied sciences.

[105]  M. Pandey Prevalence of chronic bronchitis in a rural community of the Hill Region of Nepal. , 1984, Thorax.

[106]  M. Pandey,et al.  Domestic smoke pollution and chronic bronchitis in a rural community of the Hill Region of Nepal. , 1984, Thorax.

[107]  H. Reynolds,et al.  Alterations in the antibacterial properties of rabbit pulmonary macrophages exposed to wood smoke. , 1984, The American review of respiratory disease.

[108]  NEUMOCONIOSIS POR INHALACION DEL HUMO DE LEÑA , 1983 .

[109]  D. Kossove Smoke-filled rooms and lower respiratory disease in infants. , 1982, South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde.

[110]  J. Belizán,et al.  Carbon monoxide contamination in dwellings in poor rural areas of Guatemala , 1981, Bulletin of environmental contamination and toxicology.

[111]  H. Anderson,et al.  Chronic lung disease in the Papua New Guinea Highlands. , 1979, Thorax.

[112]  H. Anderson Respiratory abnormalities, smoking habits and ventilatory capacity in a highland community in Papua New Guinea: prevalence and effect on mortality. , 1979, International journal of epidemiology.

[113]  H. Anderson,et al.  Respiratory abnormalities in Papua New Guinea children: the effects of locality and domestic wood smoke pollution. , 1978, International journal of epidemiology.

[114]  M. Horsmanheimo,et al.  Lung biology in health and disease , 1977 .

[115]  H. Anderson Respiratory abnormalities and ventilatory capacity in a Papua New Guinea Island community. , 1976, The American review of respiratory disease.

[116]  K. Master Air pollution in New Guinea. Cause of chronic pulmonary disease among stone-age natives in the Highlands. , 1974, JAMA.

[117]  P Clifford,et al.  Carcinogens in the nose and throat: nasopharyngeal carcinoma in Kenya. , 1972, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine.

[118]  S. Padmavati,et al.  INCIDENCE AND ETIOLOGY OF CHRONIC COR PULMONALE IN DELHI: A NECROPSY STUDY. , 1964, Diseases of the chest.

[119]  S. Padmavati,et al.  Chronic Cor Pulmonale in Delhi: A Study of 127 Cases , 1959, Circulation.

[120]  P. Preziosi [Chronic cor pulmonale]. , 1952, La Riforma medica.