Abstract

Exposure to household air pollution (HAP) from cooking and heating with solid fuels is a major risk factor for morbidity and mortality in sub-Saharan Africa. Children under five are particularly at risk for acute lower respiratory infection. We use baseline data from a randomized controlled trial evaluating a household energy intervention in Gisenyi, Rwanda to investigate the role of the microenvironment as a determinant of children’s HAP-related health symptoms. Our sample includes 529 households, with 694 children under five. We examine the association between likelihood of HAP-related health symptom prevalence and characteristics of the microenvironment including: dwelling and cooking area structure; distance to nearest road; and tree cover. We find that children residing in groups of enclosed dwellings, in households that cook indoors, and in households proximate to tree cover, are significantly more likely to experience symptoms of respiratory infection, illness with cough and difficulty breathing. On the other hand, children in households with cemented floors and ventilation holes in the cooking area, are significantly less likely to experience the same symptoms. Our findings suggest that in addition to promoting increased access to clean cooking technologies, there are important infrastructure and microenvironment-related interventions that mitigate HAP exposure.

Highlights

  • 3 billion people, mostly in low-income countries, use solid fuels for cooking and heating (WHO 2016)

  • The cardiopulmonary symptom of difficulty breathing was prevalent among 20.1% children, and respiratory infection was least prevalent at 14.4%

  • Majority main respondents are women (88.7%), the average age is 33.6 years, 42.2% have attained secondary education and 61.1% are aware of the negative health consequences from burning biomass fuels in traditional stoves

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Summary

Introduction

3 billion people, mostly in low-income countries, use solid fuels (wood, agricultural residue, dung, charcoal and coal) for cooking and heating (WHO 2016). Though there has been a decline in the relative share of the global population using solid fuels (dropping from 62% to 41% between 1980 and 2010), owing to population growth and thin or missing markets for improved cooking fuels and technologies (GACC 2017), the absolute number of solid fuel users has remained high. Close to 646 million people using solid fuels reside in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), and the absolute number of users is expected to continue to increase through 2030 (Bonjour et al 2015). The resulting household air pollution (HAP) accounts for 3.7–4.8 million deaths, as per WHO 2012 estimates, while the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) Study estimates between 2.2 million to 3.6 million deaths (Landrigan et al 2017) from HAP. HAP-related illnesses responsible for millions of these deaths include stroke (34%), ischemic heart disease (26%), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (22%), pneumonia (12%), and lung cancer (6%) (WHO 2016)

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