Would removing indoor air particulates in children's environments reduce rate of absenteeism--a hypothesis.

To conduct a controlled trial to test the ability of a newly developed electrostatic air cleaning technology (EAC) to improve Indoor Air Quality (IAQ) as defined by levels of airborne particles and to investigate the potential to reduce non-attendance rates due to illness among children in two Swedish day care centres. The EAC technology was shown to significantly reduce the indoor particulate load for very fine particles caused by outdoor air pollution by 78% and to reduce the number of fine particles produced indoors by 45%. To test the hypothesis, non-attendance was followed in two centres during 3 years. The EAC technology was in operation during year 2. Non-attendance rates among children in the larger day-care centre decreased by 55%, equalling those levels noted in family-based day care. It is speculated that the air cleaning effect may be due to alterations in electrostatic forces operating within the room enabling fine particulate matter to more easily become and stay airborne. The EAC technology is cost-efficient and might be a way forward to improve IAQ.

[1]  G. Richardson,et al.  Negative air ionisation and the generation of hydrogen peroxide , 1996 .

[2]  M. Chapman,et al.  House dust mite exposure as a cause of asthma , 1992, Clinical and experimental allergy : journal of the British Society for Allergy and Clinical Immunology.

[3]  D. Hinshaw,et al.  Hydrogen peroxide as a potent bacteriostatic antibiotic: implications for host defense. , 1995, Free radical biology & medicine.

[4]  E J Reed,et al.  Biological impact of small air ions. , 1976, Science.

[5]  J. Schwartz,et al.  Air pollution and daily mortality: a review and meta analysis. , 1994, Environmental research.

[6]  D. A. Dunnett Classical Electrodynamics , 2020, Nature.

[7]  D. Norbäck,et al.  Aerosols, subjective indoor air quality and asthma in schools , 1997 .

[8]  W. MacNee,et al.  Particulate air pollution and acute health effects , 1995, The Lancet.