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« Previous AbstractMeasured concentrations of VOCs in several non-residential microenvironments in the United States    Next AbstractChanges in behavior are unable to disrupt a trophic cascade involving a specialist herbivore and its food plant »

J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol


Title:Contribution to volatile organic compound exposures from time spent in stores and restaurants and bars
Author(s):Loh MM; Houseman EA; Levy JI; Spengler JD; Bennett DH;
Address:"Department of Environmental Health, National Public Health Institute, Kuopio, Finland. miranda.loh@ktl.fi"
Journal Title:J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol
Year:2009
Volume:20081112
Issue:7
Page Number:660 - 673
DOI: 10.1038/jes.2008.62
ISSN/ISBN:1559-064X (Electronic) 1559-0631 (Linking)
Abstract:"Many people spend time in stores and restaurants, yet there has been little investigation of the influence of these microenvironments on personal exposure. Relative to the outdoors, transportation, and the home, these microenvironments have high concentrations of several volatile organic compounds (VOCs). We developed a stochastic model to examine the effect of VOC concentrations in these microenvironments on total personal exposure for (1) non-smoking adults working in offices who spend time in stores and restaurants or bars and (2) non-smoking adults who work in these establishments. We also compared the effect of working in a smoking versus non-smoking restaurant or bar. Input concentrations for each microenvironment were developed from the literature whereas time activity inputs were taken from the National Human Activity Patterns Survey. Time-averaged exposures were simulated for 5000 individuals over a weeklong period for each analysis. Mean contributions to personal exposure from non-working time spent in stores and restaurants or bars range from <5% to 20%, depending on the VOC and time-activity patterns. At the 95th percentile of the distribution of the proportion of personal exposure attributable to time spent in stores and restaurants or bars, these microenvironments can be responsible for over half of a person's total exposure to certain VOCs. People working in restaurants or bars where smoking is allowed had the highest fraction of exposure attributable to their workplace. At the median, people who worked in stores or restaurants tended to have 20-60% of their total exposures from time spent at work. These results indicate that stores and restaurants can be large contributors to personal exposure to VOCs for both workers in those establishments and for a subset of people who visit these places, and that incorporation of these non-residential microenvironments can improve models of personal exposure distributions"
Keywords:"Adolescent Adult Aged Air Pollutants/*analysis/toxicity Air Pollution, Indoor/adverse effects/*analysis/statistics & numerical data Alcohol Drinking Environmental Exposure/adverse effects/*analysis/statistics & numerical data Female Humans Male Middle Age;"
Notes:"MedlineLoh, Miranda M Houseman, E Andres Levy, Jonathan I Spengler, John D Bennett, Deborah H eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't 2008/11/13 J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol. 2009 Nov; 19(7):660-73. doi: 10.1038/jes.2008.62. Epub 2008 Nov 12"

 
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