Grantee Research Project Results
2012 Progress Report: Assess the Linkage Between School-Related Environment, Children’s School Performance/Health, and Environmental Policies Through Environmental Public Health Tracking
EPA Grant Number: R834787Title: Assess the Linkage Between School-Related Environment, Children’s School Performance/Health, and Environmental Policies Through Environmental Public Health Tracking
Investigators: Lin, Shao
Institution: The State University of New York
EPA Project Officer: Hahn, Intaek
Project Period: February 1, 2011 through January 31, 2014 (Extended to January 31, 2017)
Project Period Covered by this Report: February 1, 2012 through January 31,2013
Project Amount: $500,000
RFA: Exploring Linkages Between Health Outcomes and Environmental Hazards, Exposures, and Interventions for Public Health Tracking and Risk Management (2009) RFA Text | Recipients Lists
Research Category: Human Health
Objective:
The objective of this project is to develop new and improve existing Environmental Public Health Indicators (EPHIs) related to the school environment in order to evaluate the linkage between school environment, children’s health and performance as well as the impact of state and local environmental policy intervention. The ultimate goals are to identify school-related EPHIs, which can be used for routine and long-term environmental public health tracking and surveillance, planning appropriate interventions, and protecting children’s health.
Progress Summary:
We have completed all activities planned originally in Year 2, including: (1) data request/ access;(2) preparation activities for analyses by cleaning and linking existing datasets; (3) develop indicators; (4) develop statistical methods; (5) school environment and attendance/test score analysis, despite the delay of health data access; and (6) intervention analysis. Some components scheduled to start in Year 3 have been completed ahead of schedule, including intervention analyses and manuscript preparation.
In more detail, we have begun recruiting a new Research Scientist I to act as a project coordinator as well as a student intern to work on the project. All data currently used in analyses has been cleaned and merged. A comprehensive ratings summary was compiled ranking indicators high, medium, or low, based on our specific criteria. Indicators include measures of various indoor hazards (indoor air quality, school building conditions, and composite measures) and outdoor school-related environmental hazards (traffic, air pollution, proximity to industrial facilities, and pesticide use and management) that have a biological basis for concern. We also have made significant progress in assessing hazard/exposure-outcome relationships, both over time and assessing attendance as the primary outcome. Descriptive and bivariate analyses have been completed and others are underway. One study demonstrated associations between school environmental problems and student test scores and has been submitted to a peer-reviewed journal. We analyzed the impacts of environmental policies, including retrofitting school buses and the NOx State Implementation Plan (SIP) Call. Varied methods have been used in the analysis, including descriptive, logistic regression, and time series (general additive models). Also, QA/QC procedures have been constantly performed throughout the project in order to ensure good data quality standards, appropriate statistical methods, precision and validity of the results.
Future Activities:
The activities for the third year of this grant will include completing hazard-outcome analyses and intervention analyses, reporting findings, and integrating our findings into the NYS Environmental Public Health Tracking system (EPHT). The team will utilize appropriate statistical approaches to gain an increased understanding of the role of various aspects of the school environment with respect to respiratory health outcomes (asthma hospitalizations and emergency room visits), student attendance, and performance in school. Multi-level approaches with case-control and cross-sectional study designs will be applied using multivariate linear and logistic regression techniques. Also, source apportionment, principal components analysis, and land-use regression will be used during validation assessments. We also will use time-series (general-additive models) and cross-sectional (for spatial comparisons) analysis designs to examine potential impacts from environmental actions and policies such as the school bus retrofitting/ultra-low-sulfur diesel fuel policy and NOx SIP Call in NYS. Further, we plan to formulate and submit seven papers to peer-reviewed journals. Lastly, we anticipate being able to begin integrating new or enhance old school environmental public health indicators into the NYS EPHT.
Journal Articles on this Report : 3 Displayed | Download in RIS Format
Other project views: | All 22 publications | 5 publications in selected types | All 5 journal articles |
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Lin S, Jones R, Munsie JP, Nayak SG, Fitzgerald EF, Hwang SA. Childhood asthma and indoor allergen exposure and sensitization in Buffalo, New York. International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health 2012;215(3):297-305. |
R834787 (2012) R834787 (2013) R834787 (2014) R834787 (2015) R834787 (Final) |
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Lin S, Kielb CL, Reddy AL, Chapman BR, Hwang S-A. Comparison of indoor air quality management strategies between the school and district levels in New York State. Journal of School Health 2012;82(3):139-146. |
R834787 (2012) R834787 (2013) R834787 (2014) R834787 (2015) R834787 (Final) |
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Lin S, Jones R, Pantea C, Ozkaynak H, Rao ST, Hwang S-A, Garcia VC. Impact of NOx emissions reduction policy on hospitalizations for respiratory disease in New York State. Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology 2013;23(1):73-80. |
R834787 (2012) R834787 (2013) R834787 (2014) R834787 (2015) R834787 (Final) |
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Supplemental Keywords:
Children, school-related hazards, public health trackingProgress and Final Reports:
Original AbstractThe perspectives, information and conclusions conveyed in research project abstracts, progress reports, final reports, journal abstracts and journal publications convey the viewpoints of the principal investigator and may not represent the views and policies of ORD and EPA. Conclusions drawn by the principal investigators have not been reviewed by the Agency.
Project Research Results
- Final Report
- 2015 Progress Report
- 2014 Progress Report
- 2013 Progress Report
- 2011 Progress Report
- Original Abstract
5 journal articles for this project