1. Carbon monoxide levels in households using coal-briquette fuelled stoves exceed WHO air quality guidelines in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.
- Author
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Dickinson-Craig, Emma, Bartington, Suzanne E., Watts, Rachel, Mandakhbayar, Oyunbolor, Khurelbaatar, Enkh-Od, Ochir, Chimedsuren, Boldbaatar, Damdindorj, Warburton, David, Thomas, G. Neil, Pope, Francis D., Sereeter, Lodoysamba, Manaseki-Holland, Semira, and Badarch, Jargalsaikhan
- Subjects
CARBON monoxide analysis ,COOKING equipment ,HOME environment ,AIR pollution ,PARTICULATE matter ,CROSS-sectional method ,INDOOR air pollution ,FOSSIL fuels ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL protocols ,RESEARCH funding ,ENVIRONMENTAL exposure - Abstract
In 2019, a domestic raw coal ban (RCB) was introduced in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. Coal-briquettes have since been promoted in Ger district households, however implications for carbon monoxide (CO) exposure remains uncertain. We obtained 48-hour indoor CO concentrations in 23 Ger district households and compared these to 10 raw-coal households. Information on household characteristics, fuel use behaviour and stove venting practices was collected by survey. Mean 48-hour CO concentrations in coal-briquette households was 6.1 ppm (range 1.5–35.8 ppm) with no signfiicant differences by household, stove or venting factors. Peak time-weighted average CO concentrations exceeded WHO Indoor Air Quality guidelines in 9 (39%) households; with all surpassing the 8-hour guideline (>8.6 ppm); 3(13%) the 24-hour guideline (>6 ppm) and 2(9%) the 1-hour guideline (>30 ppm). Median CO levels were significantly lower in coal-briquette compared to raw coal households (p = 0.049). Indoor CO reduction was associated with RCB implementation although hazardous levels persist in this setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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