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Health Effects of Household Solid Fuel Use: Findings from 11 Countries within the Prospective Urban and Rural Epidemiology Study

机译:家庭固体燃料使用的健康效果:从预期城乡流行病学研究中的11个国家的调查结果

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Background: Household air pollution (HAP) from solid fuel use for cooking affects 2.5 billion individuals globally and may contribute substantially to disease burden. However, few prospective studies have assessed the impact of HAP on mortality and cardiorespiratory disease. Objectives: Our goal was to evaluate associations between HAP and mortality, cardiovascular disease (CVD), and respiratory disease in the prospective urban and rural epidemiology (PURE) study. Methods: We studied 91,350 adults 35–70 y of age from 467 urban and rural communities in 11 countries (Bangladesh, Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia, India, Pakistan, Philippines, South Africa, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe). After a median follow-up period of 9.1 y, we recorded 6,595 deaths, 5,472 incident cases of CVD (CVD death or nonfatal myocardial infarction, stroke, or heart failure), and 2,436 incident cases of respiratory disease (respiratory death or nonfatal chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, pulmonary tuberculosis, pneumonia, or lung cancer). We used Cox proportional hazards models adjusted for individual, household, and community-level characteristics to compare events for individuals living in households that used solid fuels for cooking to those using electricity or gas. Results: We found that 41.8% of participants lived in households using solid fuels as their primary cooking fuel. Compared with electricity or gas, solid fuel use was associated with fully adjusted hazard ratios of 1.12 (95% CI: 1.04, 1.21) for all-cause mortality, 1.08 (95% CI: 0.99, 1.17) for fatal or nonfatal CVD, 1.14 (95% CI: 1.00, 1.30) for fatal or nonfatal respiratory disease, and 1.12 (95% CI: 1.06, 1.19) for mortality from any cause or the first incidence of a nonfatal cardiorespiratory outcome. Associations persisted in extensive sensitivity analyses, but small differences were observed across study regions and across individual and household characteristics. Discussion: Use of solid fuels for cooking is a risk factor for mortality and cardiorespiratory disease. Continued efforts to replace solid fuels with cleaner alternatives are needed to reduce premature mortality and morbidity in developing countries.
机译:背景:烹饪的固体燃料用途的家庭空气污染(HAP)影响全球25亿个人,可能会对疾病负担作出大量贡献。然而,很少的前瞻性研究已经评估了HAP对死亡率和心肺疾病的影响。目的:我们的目标是评估HAP和死亡率,心血管疾病(CVD)和前瞻性城乡流行病学(PURE)研究中的呼吸系统之间的关联。方法:在11个国家,我们研究了91,350名成人35-70岁的成人35-70岁(孟加拉国,巴西,智利,中国,哥伦比亚,印度,巴基斯坦,菲律宾,南非,坦桑尼亚和津巴布韦)。经过9.1 y中位后续期间,我们记录了6,595例死亡,5,472例CVD(CVD死亡或非致死心肌梗死,中风或心力衰竭)和2,436例呼吸道疾病病例(呼吸死亡或非致病性慢性阻塞性肺病,肺结核,肺炎或肺癌)。我们使用了对个人,家庭和社区层面特征调整的COX比例危险模型,以比较生活在使用固体燃料的家庭中的人员对使用电力或燃气的人的烹饪。结果:我们发现,41.8%的参与者在使用固体燃料作为主要烹饪燃料的家庭住户。与电或气体相比,固体燃料使用与1.12(95%CI:1.04,1.21)的完全调整的危险比有关,用于所有原因死亡率,1.08(95%CI:0.99,1.17)用于致命或非致命的CVD,1.14 (95%CI:1.00,1.30)对于致命或非致命呼吸道疾病,1.12(95%CI:1.06,1.19),来自任何原因的死亡率或非缺失的心肺结果的第一次发生率。在广泛的敏感性分析中持续存在的关联,但在研究区域和各个家庭特征上观察到较小的差异。讨论:使用固体燃料进行烹饪是死亡率和心肺疾病的危险因素。继续努力用更清洁的替代品取代固体燃料,以减少发展中国家的过早死亡率和发病率。

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