Title: | Housing interventions and control of health-related chemical agents: a review of the evidence |
Author(s): | Sandel M; Baeder A; Bradman A; Hughes J; Mitchell C; Shaughnessy R; Takaro TK; Jacobs DE; |
Address: | "Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02118, USA. megan.sandel@bmc.org" |
Journal Title: | J Public Health Manag Pract |
DOI: | 10.1097/PHH.0b013e3181e3cc2a |
ISSN/ISBN: | 1550-5022 (Electronic) 1078-4659 (Linking) |
Abstract: | "Subject matter experts systematically reviewed evidence on the effectiveness of housing interventions that affect health outcomes associated with exposure to chemical agents, such as pesticides, lead, volatile organic compounds, as well as the radon gas. Particulates were also examined, and the role of ventilation on exposures was assessed. The review included both published literature and peer-reviewed reports from the US Environmental Protection Agency. Four of the 14 interventions reviewed had sufficient evidence to demonstrate their effectiveness and are ready for implementation: radon air mitigation by using active soil depressurization systems, integrated pest management to reduce exposures to pesticides, smoke-free home policies making indoor areas smoke-free (ie, no smoking allowed anywhere at any time), and residential lead hazard control. Four interventions needed more field evaluation, 3 needed formative research, and 3 either had no sufficient evidence of effectiveness or had evidence the interventions were ineffective. This evidence review shows that housing improvements are likely to help reduce radon-induced lung cancer, cardiovascular mortality related to secondhand smoke, and neurological effects from exposure to pesticides and lead paint. Investing in housing interventions may yield important savings from reduced disease and injury from avoidable exposures to chemical agents" |
Keywords: | "Air Pollution, Indoor/*prevention & control Evidence-Based Medicine Housing/*standards Humans Inorganic Chemicals/adverse effects Pesticides/adverse effects Safety Management/*methods United States United States Environmental Protection Agency Ventilation;" |
Notes: | "MedlineSandel, Megan Baeder, Andrea Bradman, Asa Hughes, Jack Mitchell, Clifford Shaughnessy, Richard Takaro, Tim K Jacobs, David E eng Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S. Review 2010/08/21 J Public Health Manag Pract. 2010 Sep-Oct; 16(5 Suppl):S24-33. doi: 10.1097/PHH.0b013e3181e3cc2a" |