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Journal ArticleOpen Access

Household and personal air pollution exposure measurements from 120 communities in eight countries: results from the PURE-AIR study

Author Affiliations
University of British Columbia, University of Liverpool, Oregon State University, Sensors (United States), ...
Published InThe Lancet Planetary Health
Year2020
Citations157

Abstract

BackgroundApproximately 2·8 billion people are exposed to household air pollution from cooking with polluting fuels. Few monitoring studies have systematically measured health-damaging air pollutant (ie, fine particulate matter [PM2·5] and black carbon) concentrations from a wide range of cooking fuels across diverse populations. This multinational study aimed to assess the magnitude of kitchen concentrations and personal exposures to PM2·5 and black carbon in rural communities with a wide range of cooking environments.MethodsAs part of the Prospective Urban and Rural Epidemiological (PURE) cohort, the PURE-AIR study was done in 120 rural communities in eight countries (Bangladesh, Chile, China, Colombia, India, Pakistan, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe). Data were collected from 2541 households and from 998 individuals (442 men and 556 women). Gravimetric (or…
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