Abstract

As part of the exposure assessment scheme for a community-based air pollution health effects study, 43 homes of study participants, located in two Houston neighborhoods, were monitored for weekly-average indoor formaldehyde levels by means of diffusion samplers. Consecutive 12-hour aldehyde sampling for one-week periods was conducted in 12 of the homes by means of pumps and impingers. In six houses where simultaneous monitoring with both methods occurred, good correlation between the results from the diffusion samplers and the standard impinger method was observed. Diffusion sampler precision was variable and lower than expected, and a small positive measurement bias could be inferred. The distribution of house-average indoor formaldehyde concentrations from diffusion monitoring was similar to that obtained during a previous housing survey in Houston, with concentrations in 19% of the homes exceeding 0.10 ppm. Formaldehyde levels in this group of conventional, mostly older homes could not be associated with smoking, cooking, home age or structure type. However, there was a statistically significant difference between mean indoor concentrations in the two neighborhoods.

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