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Establishing integrated rural-urban cohorts to assess air pollution-related health effects in pregnant women, children and adults in Southern India: an overview of objectives, design and methods in the Tamil Nadu Air Pollution and Health Effects (TAPHE) study

Authors :
Sru-Car Team
Gurusamy Thangavel
Naveen Puttaswamy
Rupinder S Dhaliwal
Deepak Shukla
Kalpana Balakrishnan
Padmavathi Ramaswamy
Vettriselvi Venkatesan
Priscilla Johnson
Krishnendu Mukhopadhyay
Sankar Sambandam
Santu Ghosh
Solomon F. D. Paul
Source :
BMJ Open
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
BMJ, 2015.

Abstract

Introduction In rapidly developing countries such as India, the ubiquity of air pollution sources in urban and rural communities often results in ambient and household exposures significantly in excess of health-based air quality guidelines. Few efforts, however, have been directed at establishing quantitative exposure–response relationships in such settings. We describe study protocols for The Tamil Nadu Air Pollution and Health Effects (TAPHE) study, which aims to examine the association between fine particulate matter (PM 2.5 ) exposures and select maternal, child and adult health outcomes in integrated rural–urban cohorts. Methods and analyses The TAPHE study is organised into five component studies with participants drawn from a pregnant mother–child cohort and an adult cohort (n=1200 participants in each cohort). Exposures are assessed through serial measurements of 24–48 h PM 2.5 area concentrations in household microenvironments together with ambient measurements and time-activity recalls, allowing exposure reconstructions. Generalised additive models will be developed to examine the association between PM 2.5 exposures, maternal (birth weight), child (acute respiratory infections) and adult (chronic respiratory symptoms and lung function) health outcomes while adjusting for multiple covariates. In addition, exposure models are being developed to predict PM 2.5 exposures in relation to household and community level variables as well as to explore inter-relationships between household concentrations of PM 2.5 and air toxics. Finally, a bio-repository of peripheral and cord blood samples is being created to explore the role of gene–environment interactions in follow-up studies. Ethics and dissemination The study protocols have been approved by the Institutional Ethics Committee of Sri Ramachandra University, the host institution for the investigators in this study. Study results will be widely disseminated through peer-reviewed publications and scientific presentations. In addition, policy-relevant recommendations are also being planned to inform ongoing national air quality action plans concerning ambient and household air pollution.

Details

ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bd6c25ef224c2195b9c2b2a63a13fef2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008090