Household Air Pollution (HAP) from biomass cooking fuels is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in low-income settings worldwide. In Nepal the use of open stoves with solid biomass fuels is the ...primary method of domestic cooking. To assess patterns of domestic air pollution we performed continuous measurement of carbon monoxide (CO) and particulate Matter (PM2.5) in 12 biomass fuel households in Janakpur, Nepal. We measured kitchen PM2.5 and CO concentrations at one-minute intervals for an approximately 48-h period using the TSI DustTrak II 8530/SidePak AM510 (TSI Inc, St. Paul MN, USA) or EL-USB-CO data logger (Lascar Electronics, Erie PA, USA) respectively. We also obtained information regarding fuel, stove and kitchen characteristics and cooking activity patterns. Household cooking was performed in two daily sessions (median total duration 4 h) with diurnal variability in pollutant concentrations reflecting morning and evening cooking sessions and peak concentrations associated with fire-lighting. We observed a strong linear relationship between PM2.5 measurements obtained by co-located photometric and gravimetric monitoring devices, providing local calibration factors of 4.9 (DustTrak) and 2.7 (SidePak). Overall 48-h average CO and PM2.5 concentrations were 5.4 (SD 4.3) ppm (12 households) and 417.6 (SD 686.4) μg/m3 (8 households), respectively, with higher average concentrations associated with cooking and heating activities. Overall average PM2.5 concentrations and peak 1-h CO concentrations exceeded WHO Indoor Air Quality Guidelines. Average hourly PM2.5 and CO concentrations were moderately correlated (r = 0.52), suggesting that CO has limited utility as a proxy measure for PM2.5 exposure assessment in this setting. Domestic indoor air quality levels associated with biomass fuel combustion in this region exceed WHO Indoor Air Quality standards and are in the hazardous range for human health.
•Intensive PM2.5 and CO monitoring was performed in 12 biomass fuel-using households in Janakpur.•Domestic cooking activity patterns and kitchen, stove and fuel characteristics were recorded.•Temporal PM2.5 and CO patterns demonstrated diurnal variability reflecting morning and evening cooking sessions.•Average PM2.5 and peak CO concentrations both exceeded World Health Organization (WHO) Indoor Air Quality Guidelines.•Concentrations of PM2.5 and CO were moderately correlated during cooking periods.
The exposure of children to air pollution in low resource settings is believed to be high because of the common use of biomass fuels for cooking. We used microenvironment sampling to estimate the ...respirable fraction of air pollution (particles with median diameter less than 4μm) to which 7–9year old children in southern Nepal were exposed. Sampling was conducted for a total 2649h in 55 households, 8 schools and 8 outdoor locations of rural Dhanusha. We conducted gravimetric and photometric sampling in a subsample of the children in our study in the locations in which they usually resided (bedroom/living room, kitchen, veranda, in school and outdoors), repeated three times over one year. Using time activity information, a 24-hour time weighted average was modeled for all the children in the study. Approximately two-thirds of homes used biomass fuels, with the remainder mostly using gas. The exposure of children to air pollution was very high. The 24-hour time weighted average over the whole year was 168μg/m3. The non-kitchen related samples tended to show approximately double the concentration in winter than spring/autumn, and four times that of the monsoon season. There was no difference between the exposure of boys and girls. Air pollution in rural households was much higher than the World Health Organization and the National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Nepal recommendations for particulate exposure.
•Air pollution exposure (respirable PM) was estimated for children in Nepal.•Gravimetric and photometric microenvironment sampling was conducted.•Total sampling was repeated three times over a year and totaled over 2500 hours.•The 24-hour time weighted average was 168µg/m3.•There was substantial variability from season to season and by fuel type.•There was no difference in exposure between boys and girls.
A renaissance for polymaths Devakumar, D; Russell, NJ; Wolfe, I
Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine,
12/2019, Letnik:
112, Številka:
12
Journal Article
Migration, adolescents and health Devakumar, D
European journal of public health,
09/2020, Letnik:
30, Številka:
Supplement_5
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Odprti dostop
Abstract
In low- and middle-income countries, migration for work is common but the health consequences on adolescents is poorly understood. Particularly in low-resource settings, when children enter ...their adolescent years, their lives change dramatically as they take on adult roles. Young girls may get married and forced to move to their husband's home where they conduct domestic work and are exposed to high levels of air pollution from cooking. They are also more likely to become parents themselves. Many girls and boys drop out of school to work near their home or migrate within the country or abroad. They face risks throughout the journey and often work in precarious forms of labour. Among them, the unaccompanied adolescents face even greater risks than those who move with their parents. When parents migrate, despite increases in wealth from remittances, child and adolescent mental and physical health tends to worsen. With evidence mostly from the South Asian context, Dr Devakumar will explain detrimental impact of parental migration on left-adolescents and raise the importance of policy makers and health-care professionals on taking action to improve the health planning targeting of these young people.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the level of accuracy and precision of bone scan (BS), MRI, and digital radiography (DR) to measure long bone tumors to design custom-made prosthesis ...(CMP)/modular prosthesis (MP) in limb salvage surgery (LSS) with the help of phantom and patient’s study. There are two separate groups: one is the phantom study and another one is the patient’s study. The phantom study is done with the Jaszack Phantom for the Gamma camera and the indigenous phantom for the MRI and DR. Three independent imaging professionals (nuclear medicine physicians and radiologists) measured the distance between standardized, preselected points on the Jaszack phantom in the Gamma Camera (GC) and indigenous phantom on the coronal and sagittal view of the MRI scan and in digital radiography. The measured values were compared with the known values for phantom measurement. A total of 36 patients, which include 24 males and 12 females, 3 independent imaging professionals measured the patient’s long bone in a bone scan, MRI and DR and compared it with histopathological specimen measurement after limb salvage surgery (LSS). Descriptive statistics using appropriate measures of central tendency and dispersion were employed to describe the data. Karl-Pearson correlation coefficient was used to establish the association between continuous covariates. Paired t-test was utilized to test the differences in paired values for statistical significance. A near-perfect positive correlation was evident between all three pairs of bone scan, MRI scan, and digital radiography values, and a positive agreement within 1 mm of the bone scan, MRI scan, and DR values of all three pairs was around 95%. For the phantom study, we conclude that Gamma camera and MRI measurements are equal in physical measurements (MCF-1). DR measurements were found to be near equal physical measurements and multiplication correction factor (MCF)—0.9104 and three observer’s measurements values were also near normal. For the patient’s study, we conclude that the bone scan, MRI, and DR measurements of 3 independent imaging professionals are near normal, and it was confirmed with pathological specimen after LSS, to confirm reliability, repeatability, reproducibility, and accuracy of the tumor length to do custom-made prosthesis or modular prosthesis for the patients who are affected by osteosarcoma and Ewing’s sarcoma.
The conflict in Syria has led to the displacement of 1.5 million refugees into the neighboring country of Lebanon, with a majority that have yet to return to their homeland. Syrian adolescents in the ...town of Bar Elias in the Bekaa Valley, Lebanon have lived and grown in the face of resource-limited environments, restricted movement, and a longing for return. Resilience is manifested in the adaptation to such circumstances through close supportive relationships, social engagement, employment, and religion. There is a communal aspect to resilience that is important to the adolescent refugee experience and to the efforts supporting these communities.
Fifteen one-to-one interviews and two focus groups, with a total of eighteen Syrian adolescents, were analyzed using an inductive thematic analysis informed by grounded theory principles. Participants were recruited through partnering non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in the area, and ethical approval was granted through UCL and the American University in Beirut (AUB).
Syrian adolescents highlighted supportive relationships, communal activities and spaces, memories of home, employment, and shared environments as integral elements to their personal adaptation. Methods of resilience involved social cohesion and establishing stability for one's family and close community. Adaptation to the present is intertwined with facing the consequences of displacement in this new context and maintaining aspirations for a bright future. Engaging with the environments they share and help create is an important facet of resilience and occurs through group gatherings , hobbies, and online communication. Additionally, inner strength can be derived from religious activities and empowers individual processing.
This study illuminates the elements and mechanisms embodied in these adolescents’ communities and relationships that allow for adaptation to life in Bar Elias. These factors strengthen their approach to overcome social barriers and practice resilience. These communal aspects of the adolescents’ lives also connect to their memories of home, current environment, and future aspirations.
To identify the malignancy in human breast, hand-held optical probes are simulated using the Monte Carlo method. These devices were used to scan different tissue equivalent numerical breast phantoms ...to detect the embedded cancerous tissues in them. The phantoms were simulated with glandular tissues embedded with ductal carcinoma of size 5 mm and 2 mm diameter at various depths. Two optical probes namely dual side detector (DSD) probe and a single side detector (SSD) probe are designed through which one million light photons of wavelengths 600 nm and 800 nm respectively were passed into the numerical phantoms. The photons that were backscattered from the phantoms were received by the detectors in both probes. They were measured as signals and both probes were able to detect the presence of the embedded cancerous tissues at different depths. The results indicate that the probes with a light source at 800 nm could detect deep-seated inhomogeneities. The absolute value of Peak Intensity (|PI|) and Full Width at Half Maximum (FWHM) would be indicative of their location and approximate size of the embedded tissues. The |PI| decreases with the size and depth of the embedded tissue, and the FWHM increases with depth. The results show that the designed probes are capable of detecting small variations in tissues.
Birth interval is an important and potentially modifiable factor that is associated with child health. Whether an association exists with longer-term outcomes in adults is less well known.
Using the ...1982 Pelotas (Brazil) Birth Cohort Study, the association of birth interval with markers of cardiovascular health at 30 years of age was examined. Multivariable linear regression was used with birth interval as a continuous variable and categorical variable, and effect modification by gender was explored.
Birth interval and cardiovascular data were present for 2,239 individuals. With birth interval as a continuous variable, no association was found but stratification by gender tended to show stronger associations for girls. When compared to birth intervals of <18 months, as binary variable, longer intervals were associated with increases in height (1.6 cm; 95% CI: 0.5, 2.8) and lean mass (1.7 kg; 95% CI: 0.2, 3.2). No difference was seen with other cardiovascular outcomes.
An association was generally not found between birth interval and cardiovascular outcomes at 30 years of age, though some evidence existed for differences between males and females and for an association with height and lean mass for birth intervals of 18 months and longer.
This paper describes the practical use of social network diagrams in the management of an outbreak of Escherichia coli O157 (VTEC) in a primary school in London. The diagrams were created during the ...outbreak to establish the extent and nature of person-to-person transmission in the cases and their contacts. The diagrams supported a tailored public health action, and hence aided in the control of the outbreak. We conclude that for selected infectious diseases, social network diagrams can provide a valuable tool in the management of an outbreak.