Household air pollution, caused by the use of plant-based or coal fuel for cooking, heating, and lighting, is putting nearly three billion people worldwide at risk of ill health and early death, according to a new Commission led by LSTM’s Professor Stephen Gordon and published in The Lancet Respiratory Medicine journal.
A third of the world’s population, primarily in Asia and Africa, use such fuels, often in an open fire or simple stove, resulting in high levels of household air pollution in poorly ventilated homes, with some studies in India finding that household air pollution in some areas is so high that it actually increases outdoor (ambient) air pollution – leading to pollution levels more than three times higher than a typical London street, and well above WHO-recommended safety levels.
The Commission, co-led by Professor William Martin, from The Ohio State University, USA, examines evidence for the effects of household air pollution on health. They conclude that an estimated 600-800 million families worldwide are at increased risk of illnesses such as respiratory tract infections, pneumonia, COPD, asthma, and lung cancer.
Despite this huge toll of premature death and ill health, coordinated international and country-led efforts to tackle household air pollution have thus far been insufficient, say the authors, and public awareness of the risks of cooking with solid fuels in poorly ventilated homes remains low in the areas most badly affected.
The women and children living in poverty who are most affected by household air pollution are also likely to have poor access to healthcare – especially the complex and expensive treatments required for much of the respiratory illness and cancer caused by household air pollution.
“Although a number of clean cooking technologies – such as advanced cook stoves, LPG or solar power systems – exist, providing affected homes with cleaner ways to cook, heat, and light their homes with biomass fuel will not be the long term solution”, says Professor Gordon. “In communities where solid fuel cooking methods are currently the norm, cleaner fuel and cooking methods need to be at least as affordable, efficient, and long-lasting as the traditional style methods they replace. They also need to be fit for the different cultures and regions in which they’re used – if families only partially adopt cleaner cooking methods, using them alongside more polluting technologies, we are potentially looking at an expensive failure, and no reduction in the millions of people currently at risk from household air pollution.”
The Commission provides a comprehensive review of the evidence for the effect on ill health and premature death of household air pollution, examines interventions currently available, and promising future developments, such as the LSTM led Cooking and Pneumonia study (CAPs) currently underway in Malawi which has recently released a video(below) about the study. It concludes by outlining research priorities which will need to be tackled if this problem is to be effectively reduced.
The Lancet Household Air Pollution Commission
Published September 3, 2014