"这些烟会让我们完蛋":肯尼亚内罗毕三所学校使用污染性燃料做饭对空气质量、健康和教育的影响

Emily Nix, Willah Nabukwangwa, J. Mwitari, F. Lorenzetti, Arthur Gohole, Serena Saligari, M. Shupler, Michael Abbott, Ghislaine Rosa, R. M. Anderson de Cuevas, Margaret Nyongesa, E. Puzzolo, Daniel Pope
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摘要

在家庭环境中,使用污染性燃料(如木材和木炭)做饭、空气污染和健康之间的联系已得到充分证实。然而,很少有研究是在依赖此类燃料做饭的学校进行的。本研究是首次对肯尼亚内罗毕学校的空气污染、烹饪和健康进行调查。我们在非正规居住区的三所学校(两所小学和一所大学)开展了一项深入的混合方法研究,这些学校使用木材和/或木炭作为餐饮燃料。在每所学校,我们都对空气污染(细颗粒物(PM2.5)和一氧化碳(CO))进行了 24 小时重复测量,以评估主厨房和附近教室的空气污染浓度,以及主厨的个人接触情况。对餐饮业员工的调查收集了他们对空气污染和健康症状的看法。为了解对健康和学校环境的影响,还与餐饮员工、教师和高级管理人员进行了焦点小组讨论。结果发现,所有学校 24 小时 PM2.5 的水平都超过了世界卫生组织(WHO)的中期目标 1 级(IT-1)(35 微克/立方米),其中教室的水平高出三倍(107.6 微克/立方米),厨房高出十倍(316.2 微克/立方米),厨师高出近六倍(200.9 微克/立方米)。污染的峰值与使用炉灶的时间密切相关,因为在烹饪期间,教室中的浓度增加了一倍,厨房中的浓度增加了两倍。餐饮服务人员表示担心自己的健康,并报告说他们感到喘息、胸痛、眼睛不适和头痛,并试图避开烟雾以减少接触。教师报告了烹饪烟雾对课堂造成的干扰,学生报告了因接触烹饪烟雾而咳嗽和打喷嚏的情况。学校需要提供支持,以实现清洁烹饪过渡,创造健康安全的学习环境。
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"This smoke will finish us": impacts of cooking with polluting fuels on air quality, health and education in three schools in Nairobi, Kenya
Links between cooking with polluting fuels (e.g., wood and charcoal), air pollution and health in domestic settings are well-established. However, few studies have been conducted in schools that rely on such fuels for catering. This study is the first investigation of air pollution, cooking, and health in schools in Nairobi, Kenya. We carried out an in-depth mixed-methods study in three schools (two primary schools and a college) in an informal settlement using wood and/or charcoal for catering. In each school, repeated 24-hour air pollution measurements (fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and carbon monoxide (CO)) were collected to assess concentrations in the main kitchen and a nearby classroom, in addition to personal exposure for the main cook. Surveys with catering staff collected data on perspectives on air pollution and health symptoms. Focus groups were conducted with catering staff, teachers and senior management to understand perceived impacts on health and the school environment. 24-hour levels of PM2.5 were found to surpass World Health Organization (WHO) interim target level 1 (IT-1) (35µg/m3) in all schools – with levels three times higher (107.6µg/m3) in classrooms, ten times higher (316.2µg/m3) in kitchens and nearly six times higher (200.9µg/m3) among cooks. Peak levels of pollution were closely linked to times of stove use, as concentrations doubled in classrooms and tripled in kitchens during cooking. Catering staff reported being concerned about their health, and reported experiencing wheezing, chest pains, eye irritation and headaches and attempted to avoid the smoke to reduce exposure. Disturbance to classes from cooking smoke was reported by teachers, with students reporting coughing and sneezing from exposure. Support is needed to enable clean cooking transitions in schools to create a healthy and safe learning environment.
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