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Quantification of Shared Air: A Social and Environmental Determinant of Airborne Disease Transmission

Author

Listed:
  • Robin Wood
  • Carl Morrow
  • Samuel Ginsberg
  • Elizabeth Piccoli
  • Darryl Kalil
  • Angelina Sassi
  • Rochelle P Walensky
  • Jason R Andrews

Abstract

Background: Tuberculosis is endemic in Cape Town, South Africa where a majority of the population become tuberculosis infected before adulthood. While social contact patterns impacting tuberculosis and other respiratory disease spread have been studied, the environmental determinants driving airborne transmission have not been quantified. Methods: Indoor carbon dioxide levels above outdoor levels reflect the balance of exhaled breath by room occupants and ventilation. We developed a portable monitor to continuously sample carbon dioxide levels, which were combined with social contact diary records to estimate daily rebreathed litres. A pilot study established the practicality of monitor use up to 48-hours. We then estimated the daily volumes of air rebreathed by adolescents living in a crowded township. Results: One hundred eight daily records were obtained from 63 adolescents aged between 12- and 20-years. Forty-five lived in wooden shacks and 18 in brick-built homes with a median household of 4 members (range 2–9). Mean daily volume of rebreathed air was 120.6 (standard error: 8.0) litres/day, with location contributions from household (48%), school (44%), visited households (4%), transport (0.5%) and other locations (3.4%). Independent predictors of daily rebreathed volumes included household type (p = 0.002), number of household occupants (p = 0.021), number of sleeping space occupants (p = 0.022) and winter season (p

Suggested Citation

  • Robin Wood & Carl Morrow & Samuel Ginsberg & Elizabeth Piccoli & Darryl Kalil & Angelina Sassi & Rochelle P Walensky & Jason R Andrews, 2014. "Quantification of Shared Air: A Social and Environmental Determinant of Airborne Disease Transmission," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 9(9), pages 1-8, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0106622
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0106622
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