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Levels, distributions and influential factors of residential airborne culturable bacteria in 12 Chinese cities: Multicenter on-site survey among dwellings.

Authors :
Fan, Lin
Han, Xu
Wang, Xinqi
Li, Li
Gong, Shuhan
Qi, Jing
Li, Xu
Ge, Tanxi
Liu, Hang
Ye, Dan
Cao, Yun
Liu, Mengmeng
Sun, Zongke
Su, Liqin
Yao, Xiaoyuan
Wang, Xianliang
Source :
Environmental Research. Sep2022:Part C, Vol. 212, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Residential airborne culturable bacteria (RAB) are commonly used to assess indoor microbial loads, which is a very effective and recognized indicator of public concern about residential air quality. Many countries and organizations have set exposure limits for residential bacteria. Nevertheless, few studies have been conducted in multicenter cities about the distribution and influencing factors of RAB. It is a challenge to investigate the distribution of RAB and identify the association between indoor influencing variables and RAB in China. The current finding implied the comparative results from a one-year on-site survey of 12 cities in China. The concentration of RAB ranged from 0 CFU/m3 to 18,078 CFU/m3, with an arithmetic median of 350 CFU/m3. RAB concentrations were more in the warm season than those in the cold season, and were more in the bedrooms than those in the living rooms. Indoor environmental indicators (including PM 2.5 and PM 10) showed the mediating role in the process of temperature and relative humidity effects on RAB.. Influential factors including family-related information (income), architectural characteristics (house type, building history, living floor, the layers of window glass, and decoration) and lifestyle behaviors (heating, new furniture, incense-burned, insecticides-used, air condition-used, and plants-growed) were related with the concentration of RAB. This study presents essential data on the distribution of RAB in some Chinese cities, and reveals the residential influential factors that might minimize health risk from RAB. • Residential airborne culturable bacteria (RAB) poses a non-negligible health risk. • RAB is more in bedrooms than in living rooms. • PM has a mediating role in the effects of temperature and humidity on RAB. • Architectural characteristics and lifestyle behaviors may influence RAB. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00139351
Volume :
212
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Environmental Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
157390311
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2022.113425