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Rationale and methodology of a multicentric prospective cohort study on 'Longitudinal Effects of Air Pollution Exposure on Adolescent Lungs (APEAL) in urban India: APEAL protocol

Por: Agrawal · T. · Phuleria · H. C. · Mohan · A. · DSouza · G. · Thimmulappa · R. · Jayaraj · B. S. · Mani · M. R. · Patil · S. · Samdarshi · P. · Nori-Sarma · A. · Wellenius · G. · Mahesh · P. A.
Introduction

Air pollution is a significant global health concern, with studies from the USA and Europe linking long-term exposure to respiratory issues and poor school attendance in children. While Indian cities experience much higher pollution levels, the impact on lung development in Indian children remains unclear. This study aims to assess the burden of impaired lung function in Indian children and identify key factors contributing to pollution-induced lung injury.

Methods and analysis

This longitudinal, prospective cohort study is conducted in four cities categorised by particulate matter 2.5 (PM2.5) levels: ‘very high’ (Delhi), ‘high’ (Mumbai, Bangalore) and ‘moderate’ (Mysore). A total of 4000 participants (1000 from each city) will be included in the study. Participants will complete a structured questionnaire covering sociodemographics, asthma and allergy history (International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood core questionnaire), dietary intake (24-hour recall and Food Frequency Questionnaire), Physical Activity-C Questionnaire and air pollution exposure. Spirometry and Forced Oscillation Technique will be used to assess lung function. Blood samples will be collected for identification of biomarkers to predict lung impairment. After quality checks, data will be compiled, summarising pulmonary function parameters alongside covariates and confounders. Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) will assess between-city and within-city differences in lung function.

We anticipate a higher prevalence of reduced lung function in children residing in cities with very high and high PM2.5 levels compared with the moderately polluted city. Findings from this study could establish normal age-appropriate lung function reference values for Indian urban children, aiding in clinical diagnosis.If a reliable biomarker for identifying children at risk of lung impairment is available, it could serve as an early predictor of poor lung health in asymptomatic children.

Ethics and dissemination

The approval from individual site institutional review board (IRB) is obtained prior to initiation of the study from institutional ethics committee, St. John’s Medical College and Hospital, Bangalore; institutional ethics committee, JSS Medical College, Mysore; institute ethics committee, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay and institute ethics committee, All India Institute of Medical Sciences. Findings from this study will be disseminated through conference presentations, peer-reviewed publications and establishment of normal age-appropriate lung function reference values for children living in urban India.

Lessons learnt from the 2021 Pacific Northwest heat dome: a qualitative study of western Washingtons healthcare community response

Por: Korfmacher · M. · Hartwell · C. · Hill · K. · Matthews-Trigg · N. · Hess · J. · Nori-Sarma · A. · Wellenius · G. · Errett · N.
Objective

The 2021 Pacific Northwest heat dome was Washington state’s deadliest recorded weather event and presented unprecedented response challenges to the state’s health sector. Understanding the impacts of this extreme heat event (EHE) on the sector as well as the barriers to and facilitators of implementing effective heat response is critical to preparing for future events, which are happening more frequently in the region due to climate change.

Design

Guided by an implementation science framework, we convened listening sessions and focus groups of the health sector in western Washington to reflect on regional response efforts.

Setting

Health sector organisations in 15 counties in western Washington State, USA: Clallam, Grays Harbor, Island, Jefferson, King, Kitsap, Lewis, Mason, Pacific, Pierce, San Juan, Skagit, Snohomish, Thurston and Whatcom.

Participants

A convenience sample of 109 listening group participants was recruited through the professional networks of the Northwest Healthcare Response Network, a regional healthcare coalition. 27 of the health sector professionals were recruited using purposive sampling to participate in seven focus groups organised by organisation type.

Results

The co-presence of the COVID-19 pandemic, limited staff capacity, resource acquisition challenges and inadequate regional collaboration emerged as key barriers, while advanced planning, indoor cooling capabilities, adapting strategies to local needs, robust internal relationships and strong external partnerships were reported to facilitate effective response. Establishing centralised coordination ahead of heat events, making improvements to the cooling capabilities of the built environment, developing plans and policies for EHEs that have co-benefits for other events, adopting evidence-informed response strategies, institutionalising the knowledge and relationships developed through prior events and improving evaluative processes (such as developing real-time monitoring capacity) will enable more effective response to future EHEs.

Conclusions

Western Washington’s health sector implemented EHE response activities that enabled essential service continuity, despite limited resources, unfamiliarity with EHEs and other systemic challenges. The recency of the heat dome presents an opportunity to incorporate lessons learnt into practice, policies, plans and built environment; these are necessary improvements ahead of future large-scale events the region may experience in the coming decades.

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