Science Inventory

AN ASTHMA INTERVENTION PILOT STUDY IN PUBLIC HOUSING: LESSONS AND BASELINE DATA

Citation:

Brugge, D., J. Vallarino, N. D. Osgood, S. Steinbach, AND J. D. Spengler. AN ASTHMA INTERVENTION PILOT STUDY IN PUBLIC HOUSING: LESSONS AND BASELINE DATA. Presented at Engineering Solutions to IAQ Problems, Raleigh, NC, 7/17-19/2000.

Description:

The paper reports baseline data and lessons learned about conducting asthma research in public housing. Nine families with asthmatic children living in a public housing development in Boston were enrolled in an asthma intevention program amimed at reducing environmental factors associated with their housing.Interventions were tailored to each residence. Given the small sample size, the purpose of the study was two-fold: (1) to document lessons that would make future studies and programs directed at childhood asthma among public housing residents more successful; and (2) to collect a high density of environmental measurements of biological and chemical contaminants and physical factors in order to generate hypotheses about possible asthma intervention programs for public housing. Visual observation siuggested that overheating, cockroaches, moisture problems, mice, and overcrowding were common. Used upholstered furniture and multiple mattresses both in the child's room and slept in by the child were found. Quantitative assessment shows high temperatures, very low relative humidity in February, high levels of cockroach antigen, relatively moderate levels of other antigens, variable levels of viable fungal spores, and elevated nitrogen dioxide levels. We conclude that the levels of environmental contaminants were largely similar to other such reports.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PRESENTATION/ PAPER)
Product Published Date:07/19/2000
Record Last Revised:06/21/2006
Record ID: 63542