presentation- pdf - Environmental Health Watch
Transcription
presentation- pdf - Environmental Health Watch
Program areas Asthma Triggers in the Home • Healthy indoor environments – home & Healthy Homes Initiative – Mahoning Valley Stuart Greenberg childcare; substandard housing; children & elderly; lead, asthma, pesticides, mold, etc. January 21, 2010 • Affordable green housing - green housing for people who need it the most www.ehw.org 216/961-4646 1 2 A Healthy House is EHW Healthy House projects 1. Dry • Lead + Asthma (1998-99) • Roach Allergen Reduction • Urban Mold & Moisture (1999-2003) • Community Environmental Health Resource Center (2002-04) • City-County Healthy House (2004-09) • Case Healthy Homes & Patients • Tenants for Healthy Housing 2. Well-ventilated 3. Comfortable (1999-2002) 4. Clean and uncluttered 5. Free of – – – – (2006-011) (2007-10) 3 Lead hazards Combustion by-products Pests and pesticides Other contaminants http://www.healthyhomestraining.org/Practitioner/Materials.htm 4 Asthma – the increase is breathtaking • #1 chronic illness of childhood • Rate doubled over last 20 years • Deaths of children increased 50% • In some Cleveland schools, 35% of students have asthma • Many theories, no answer for increase http://www.ehw.org/Asthma/ASTH_BurdenofAsthma.htm 5 6 Environmental Health Watch - www.ehw.org - 1/20/10 1 Income disparities – 2004 BRFSS Adult Lifetime Asthma Prevalence Income Level http://www.ehw.org/Asthma/ASTH_BurdenofAsthma.htm U.S. Ohio < $15,000 16.2 21.3 $15-24,999 14.2 17.5 $25-49,999 12.9 11.0 > $50,000 12.5 8.3 7 http://www.cdc.gov/asthma/brfss/04/brfssdata.htm Substandard housing Substandard housing and asthma • 40% of risk of asthma for minority children attributable to residential triggers. 8 • Pest infestation & spray pesticide use • Long-term roof and plumbing leaks leading to mold growth • Heating by gas stoves and unvented space heaters • Old carpets – reservoirs for triggers • Non-cleanable surfaces B. Lanphear, et al, Residential Exposures Associated with Asthma in US Children, PEDIATRICS, March 2001 9 10 Variety of asthma triggers Different kinds of asthma triggers interact • Psychosocial stress • Strong emotions • Exercise • Weather changes • Respiratory infection • Medications • Foods • Outdoor pollens and molds • Outdoor air pollution • Indoor allergens and irritants • Outdoor pollution enhances allergic airway inflammation • Psycho-social stress interacts with environmental triggers (JE Clougherty,Synergistic Effects of Traffic-Related Air Pollution and Exposure to Violence on Urban Asthma, Environmental Health Perspectives, August 2007) • Accumulation of disadvantages health disparity impact intensified 11 12 Environmental Health Watch - www.ehw.org - 1/20/10 2 Asthma trigger sources Inhalant Allergens House dust mites Cockroaches Warm-blooded pets • Rodents • Mold • • • Respiratory Irritants • ETS • Formaldehyde • VOCs • Unvented gas stoves • Outdoor pollution 2007 NIH Asthma Guidelines <http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/guidelines/asthma/> NIH Expert Panel Report 3: Guidelines for the Diagnosis and Management of Asthma 2007 • For long-term asthma management, essential to control relevant inhalant allergens and irritants • Reducing exposure can reduce inflammation, symptoms, need for medication Multifaceted, in-home interventions effective; single steps generally not • • Determine inhalant sensitivity http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/guidelines/asthma/ 13 CDC Task Force Effective home-visit programs For children with asthma the Task Force recommends: Program characteristics associated with positive health outcomes: • the use of home-based, multi-component, multi-trigger interventions, with an environmental focus... • • • • • on the basis of strong evidence of effectiveness in reducing symptom days, improving quality of life,…and reducing the number of school days missed Crocker, D. Home-Based Environmental Interventions to Reduce Asthma Morbidity, 2008 CDC/HUD/EPA National Healthy Homes Conference 15 14 Community centered Clinically connected Collaborative Targeted - – assess trigger sensitivity and exposure – site-specific interventions Asthma Health Outcomes Project – Univ. of Michigan SPH Allies Against Asthma 16 www.alliesagainstasthma.net/AHOP Asthma management tasks 1. Control home environmental triggers 2. Manage medication regimen 3. Anticipate and respond to exacerbations 4. Use health care system effectively 5. Communicate with childcare and school personnel 17 Crocker, D. Home-Based Environmental Interventions to Reduce Asthma Morbidity, 18 2008 CDC/HUD/EPA National Healthy Homes Conference Environmental Health Watch - www.ehw.org - 1/20/10 3 Crocker, D. Home-Based Environmental Interventions to Reduce Asthma Morbidity, 2008 CDC/HUD/EPA National Healthy Homes Conference 1 Home visit-based trigger control programs EHW trigger control interventions Hands-on Assistance • control equipment & materials • conduct low-level remediation • refer for higher-level work Family Education & Engagement • information they can use • tips for practical problem-solving • focus on making bedroom a safe space • within family capabilities and challenges • Home assessment - identify trigger sources and pathways • Education on triggers • Recommendations for mitigation • Control materials and equipment – HEPA vacuum cleaner – mattress/pillow encasements – pest control materials • Direct mitigation 19 Target trigger control interventions 20 Target trigger control interventions • Evidence of sensitivity to allergen Interventions are • more effective • less costly • less a burden on the family – medical history (seasonal outdoor) – testing: skin or blood test (perennial indoor) • Evidence of exposure to allergens and irritants – source and pathway identification checklist – analysis of settled dust if they can be targeted in terms of both sensitivity and exposure. • Targeted trigger interventions - more effective, less costly, reduced family burden 21 22 Exposure to cockroach allergen associated with German cockroaches • ―exacerbation of asthma in sensitive individuals‖ (―sufficient evidence of a causal relationship‖) • ―development of asthma‖ (―limited or suggestive evidence of an association‖) Clearing the Air, Committee on the Assessment of Asthma and Indoor Triggers, Institute of Medicine, 2000 <http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=9610> 23 24 Environmental Health Watch - www.ehw.org - 1/20/10 4 Roach sensitization, exposure and hospitalization Roaches and asthma National Cooperative Inner-city Asthma Study Rosenstreich et al. Role of Cockroach Allergy and Exposure to Cockroach Allergen in Causing Morbidity among Inner-City Children with Asthma. NEJM 1997;336:1356. 0.25 1 low no 0.2 2 hi no 0.15 3 low yes 0.1 4 hi yes 0.05 0 1 25 Spray-based roach control • Regular pesticide application — whether pests are present or not • Broadcast application — spray baseboards, floors, walls; bomb or fog whole house • Pesticides of worrisome toxicity • Not effective – pests come back 2 Group 3 health concerns 4 Rosenstreich et al. NEJM 1997;336:1356 Household pesticides • 80-90% homes report use • Increasing evidence on adverse health impacts at household level exposure • Persistence on surfaces, when done right; often done wrong • Broadcast application (spray, fog, bomb) = greatest exposure 27 Spray pesticide – allergic • Sensitivity + exposure associated with morbidity p = 0.001 0.3 exposed • 37% had positive skin test for roach allergen • Roach allergen at high levels in 50% of bedrooms group Hospiatlizations in the past year 0.4 0.35 28 Children and elderly most at risk – greater exposure and vulnerability • Children – • Acute exposure — allergic crawling, hand-to-mouth activity, breathing rates, developing nervous system, less able to detoxify • Elderly – time at home, chronic illnesses, compromised immune system reaction, asthma attack, respiratory irritation, flu-like symptoms, and skin rash • Chronic exposure — reproductive problems, neurological diseases, cancers, immune disorders 29 30 Environmental Health Watch - www.ehw.org - 1/20/10 5 Safer roach control – Integrated Pest Management Spray-based roach control No pesticide sprays, bombs or foggers – •irritant chemicals •toxic chemicals •not effective • Not safe • Not effective • Still too common, especially in low-income housing Use gel baits, bait stations and borate powders 31 32 Integrated Pest Management IPM elements • Developed for agriculture • Adapted for urban/structural pests • Recommended by health and environmental agencies • State-of-the-art in the industry • Being able to spell it doesn’t mean you know how to do it • Identification & assessment • Environmental controls - exclusion, harborage removal, sanitation • Mechanical capture • Pesticide use only as needed • Least toxic, least volatile pesticide • Precision targeting of pesticide; no broadcast application 33 34 Assessment Identification • • • • • • • • • • • • Type and number Entry points Harborages Food sources Water sources 35 Occupant report Live/dead roaches Droppings/stains Control materials – sprays, traps Sticky traps Flush Dust analysis for Bla g 1 & 2 36 Environmental Health Watch - www.ehw.org - 1/20/10 6 37 Environmental controls Seal entry points and harborages Store food securely Deny roaches: • food • water • hiding places • entry 39 Priority to non-chemical control methods • Traps • Vacuuming 41 40 Pesticide use • • • • Only as needed No broadcast application Least toxic, least volatile Small amounts, precision targeted, inaccessible to children and pets 42 Environmental Health Watch - www.ehw.org - 1/20/10 7 How Roach Baits Work . . . Roaches smell the bait Poisoned roaches go home…and die! Other roaches eat the dead roaches Roaches eat the bait 43 44 Those roaches are poisoned and die too! Multiple modes of bait transfer • Necrophagy – eat the dead • Coprophagy – eat feces • Emetophagy – eat secretions Extent depends on availability of primary food sources 45 Gel baits, bait stations and borate powders 46 Roach allergen is persistent • Elimination of infestation alone not sufficient to reduce exposure below clinically relevant level • Occupant or professional house cleaning not effective; allergens missed or concentrated into hot spots 47 48 Environmental Health Watch - www.ehw.org - 1/20/10 8 EHW cockroach allergen reduction HH project Cockroach allergen reduction through IPM and specialized cleaning 1. Infestation reduced/eliminated by precision-targeted IPM - hot-air flushing HEPA vacuuming baiting Flush 2. One-time lead dust cleaning 3. Occupant education and on-going cleaning effort http://www.ehw.org/Asthma/ASTH_HUDRoach_Sum.htm49 Cleaning intervention • Based on the HUD protocol for cleanup of lead dust: – HEPA vacuuming – Wet mopping and rinsing – HEPA vacuuming Vacuum Bait •Roaches flushed with hot air •Roaches and debris removed by HEPA-filtered vacuum •Harborages identified and baited 50 Roach control – shared responsibility • Landlord- maintain dwelling unit free from defects that support roach infestation. • Results: reduced cockroach allergen to below exacerbation levels and near proposed levels of sensitization • Pest Control Contractor - inspect entire unit to determine roach harborages, entry points, and food and water resources; use safe and effective treatments to get rid of the roaches; and provide on-going monitoring. • Tenants - cooperate with pest control efforts by contractor and landlord; maintain housekeeping practices that do not support roach infestation. 51 52 Web resources • EHW Pests and Asthma <www.ehw.org/Asthma/ASTH_home1.htm#Pests> • National Center for Healthy Housing <www.healthyhomestraining.org/IPM/> • Alliance for Healthy Homes <www.afhh.org/hhe/hhe_health_hazards.htm> • Building a Framework for Healthy Housing <www.hud.gov/offices/lead/NHHC/index.cfm> 53 http://www.ehw.org/Asthma/ASTH_home1.htm#Pests 54 Environmental Health Watch - www.ehw.org - 1/20/10 9 Cockroach IPM Case Studies Rodent allergens National Center for Healthy Housing <http://www.healthyhomestraining.org/ip m/Studies.htm/> • • • • • • Mouse and rat allergens in dander, urine, feces and saliva • Small particles remain airborne for extended periods • National Cooperative Inner-city Asthma Study – Comparison of Cost and Effectiveness Bait Aversion – Cincy Cockroach EHW Roach Allergen Reduction Boston Public Housing Farm Worker Pesticide Exposure - sensitivity: rat = 21%; mouse =18% - detected: rat = 33%; mouse = 95% 55 56 Mouse control • • • • • Seal entry points. Remove food, water, clutter. Don’t use poison pellets. Use snap traps. Only use poison (blocks) in locked bait station. Risky methods • Uncontrolled rodenticides – – poison pellets poison blocks • Illegal poisons – naphthalene moth balls – ―Tres Pasitos‖ 57 58 Mold control • Dry wet items thoroughly ASAP • Discard porous items soaked for more than a couple of days • EPA books: Mold removal • • • • – 800/438-4318 – www.epa.gov/iaq/molds 59 Clean mold from hard surfaces scrub with stiff brush, hot water & detergent; dry thoroughly Use PPE – gloves, respirator, goggles, etc. Biocides not necessary Generally area > 3’x3’ requires professional 60 Environmental Health Watch - www.ehw.org - 1/20/10 10 How Water Enters a Building Mold control • Speciation and quantification generally not needed Building envelope leaks (liquid) – unless young infant in home • Key to mold control is moisture control -Cooking, -Bathing, -Watering plants, -Breathing, -Washing, -Combustion appliances (water vapor) -Plumbing leaks (liquid) -Surface water (liquid) -Groundwater (liquid) -Air from soil (water vapor) 61 Moisture reduction General strategy: • Seal building enclosure • Divert rainwater from foundation • • • • • – Moisture, Mold & Asthma- School of Medicine, RB&C, County Board of Health • Prospective, randomized controlled trial, moderately severe asthmatic children (n = 62) • Homes with indoor mold gutters & grading • Both groups: action plan, education, and individualized problem solving Point source ventilation Repair plumbing leaks Repair faulty combustion appliances Cover bare soil in crawl spaces Eliminate cold condensing surfaces • Remediation group: mold removal and household repairs to reduce moisture 63 Moisture, Mold & Asthma- School of Medicine, UH, County Board of Health Carolyn M. Kercsmar et al, Reduction in Asthma Morbidity in Children as a Result of Home Remediation Aimed at Moisture Sources, Environmental Health Perspectives, August 2006 Moisture interventions <http://ehw.org/Asthma/ASTH_home1.htm#Moisture> • Both groups improved in asthma symptomatic days during the preremediation portion of the study • Remediation group - significant decrease in symptom days (p = 0.004) after repairs; control group did not significantly change. • Remediation group - lower rate of exacerbations (1 of 29 vs. 11 of 33, p = 0. 003). http://www.ehponline.org/members/2006/8742/8742.pdf http://ehw.org/Asthma/ASTH_home1.htm#Moisture 65 66 Environmental Health Watch - www.ehw.org - 1/20/10 11 House dust mites • Feed on skin flakes shed by people and pets. • Thrive in warm, humid environments. • Particles do not remain airborne more than a few minutes after disturbance. • Bed and couch focus for control: Dust mite control 67 Hands-on Assistance • Encase pillows and mattress in allergenimpermeable coverings • Reduce excess humidity Educate • Wash bedding weekly in hot water (>130ºF scalding hazard), bleach, hot dryer • Remove carpet in bedroom • Minimize stuffed toys – wash weekly or freeze and vacuum • Minimize humidifier use 68 Pets with fur and feathers Environmental tobacco smoke – heavy allergen loading – long duration exposure – at breathing zone. • Allergens airborne for days; transported widely on clothes • Cat allergen detectable in 100% of homes tested, even with no pet history • • • • • • • • • Remove pet Keep pet outdoors Keep out of bedroom HEPA air cleaner in small closed room 69 Products with strong odors • pesticides • cleaning products • paints • • • • art supplies perfume air fresheners cosmetics Minimize use. Use when person with asthma not present. Use aggressive ventilation. 71 • Combustion products remain airborne for days Particles cling to clothing, furniture, walls, car interiors, hair Quit Smoke outside Don’t smoke in a car Separate smoking rooms don’t wor. 70 Combustion gases & particles • Have annual furnace inspection • Do not use fuel-burning unvented space heater or fire places • Do not use stove for heating • Do not burn candles or incense • Use kitchen exhaust fan • Do not idle car in garage 72 Environmental Health Watch - www.ehw.org - 1/20/10 12 General interventions for multiple triggers • • • • Specialized cleaning Dust can contain: • Mold • Dust mites • Roach parts/ droppings • Mouse urine/feces • Pollen • Animal dander • Lead • Pesticides • Smoke particles Moisture reduction Pest control Specialized cleaning Make bedroom a safe space 73 74 Special cleaning methods • • • • Vacuum very slowly; ―dirt finder‖ helps Use low-emission HEPA-filtered vacuum Remove shoes; use washable door mat. Remove carpets (safely) • Use wet cleaning methods Allergen Source Cat & Dog –change rinse water, mop heads, cleaning rags frequently • Target sources & pathways Make floors smooth and cleanable 75 Source reduction and cleanup of pathways Particle Size (micrograms) 1-5 Exposure Pathway Air, dust Rodent 1-15 Cockroach 5-35 Air, surfaces, fabrics, dust Dust, fabrics House dust mite 5-35 Dust 76 Air cleaners • HEPA air cleaner in small closed room can reduce airborne cat dander, mold spores and particulate matter in ETS. • Roach and dust mite particles settle quickly after disturbance – dust reservoirs focus of control. • Pet allergens carried on particles that can stay airborne for hours and days • No substitute for source reduction – still have settled dust reservoirs. – air cleaners can help. • Ozone and ionic cleaner produce ozone, a lung irritant. 77 78 Environmental Health Watch - www.ehw.org - 1/20/10 13 Too Much To Do? Make bedroom a safe space • • • • • Start Here Make the bedroom a safe space for a person with asthma • Use allergen-proof bedding covers. Keep floors bare; use washable rugs. No upholstered furniture or drapes. Wash bedding biweekly in hot water. Keep toys, books, clothes in drawers or covered boxes. Keep doors closed. 79 Make bedroom a safe space • • • • • • Remove shoes at the door. No smoking, pets or plants. Use window air conditioner, not a humidifier or vaporizer. Use HEPA room air cleaner. Clean/decontaminate the room weekly. No household products with strong odors. 80 Web sites • Environmental Management of Pediatric Asthma: Guidelines for Health Care Providers, National Environmental Education & Training Foundation, 2005, <http://www.neetf.org/health/asthma/asthmaguide lines.htm>C – Environmental History Form, Environmental Intervention Guidelines, Sample Patient Flyers, EPA Asthma Home Environment Checklist • Asthma and Indoor Environments, USEPA <http://www.epa.gov/asthma/> • Environmental Health Watch, <www.ehw.org> 81 82 Thanks for your attention. www.ehw.org 216/961-4646 83 Environmental Health Watch - www.ehw.org - 1/20/10 14