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Título : Personal, indoor and outdoor air pollution levels among pregnant women
Autoría: Schembari, Anna
Triguero-Mas, Margarita  
de Nazelle, Audrey
Dadvand, Payam  
Vrijheid, Martine  
Cirach, Marta  
Martinez, David
Figueras, Francesc  
Querol, Xavier  
Basagaña, Xavier  
Eeftens, Marloes  
Meliefste, Kees
Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark  
Resumen : Aim The aims of this study were to investigate the relationship between pregnant women's personal exposures to NOx, NO2, PM2.5 concentration and absorbance as a marker for black carbon and their indoor and outdoor concentration levels at their residence, and also to identify predictors of personal exposure and indoor levels using questionnaire and time activity data. Method We recruited 54 pregnant women in Barcelona who carried a personal PM2.5 sampler for two days and NOx/NO2 passive badges for one week, while indoor and outdoor PM2.5 and NOx/NO2 levels at their residence were simultaneously measured. Time activity and house characteristics were recorded. Gravimetry determinations for PM2.5 concentration and absorbance measurements were carried out on the PM2.5 filter samples. Results Levels of personal exposure to NOx, PM2.5 and absorbance were slightly higher than indoor and outdoor levels (geometric mean of personal NOx = 61.9 vs indoor NOx = 60.6 μg m−3), while for NO2 the indoor levels were slightly higher than the personal ones. Generally, there was a high statistically significant correlation between personal exposure and indoor levels (Spearman's r between 0.78 and 0.84). Women spent more than 60% of their time indoors at home. Ventilation of the house by opening the windows, the time spent cooking and indicators for traffic intensity were re-occurring statistically significant determinants of the personal and indoor pollutants levels with models for NOx explaining the 55% and 60% of the variability respectively, and models for NO2 explaining the 39% and 16% of the variability respectively. Models for PM2.5 and absorbance explained the least of the variability. Conclusion Our findings improve the current understanding of the characterization and inter-associations between personal, indoor and outdoor pollution levels among pregnant women. Variability in personal and indoor NOx and to a lesser extent NO2 levels could be explained well, but not the variability in PM2.5 could be explained. Highlights ► First study to report on the personal, indoor and outdoor black carbon levels of pregnant women. ► Time spent indoors by pregnant women does not differ much from that of general population. ► Variability in personal and indoor NOx and NO2 levels could be explained well, but not in PM2.5.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosenv.2012.09.053
Tipo de documento: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Versión del documento: info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion
Fecha de publicación : 2-ene-2013
Licencia de publicación: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/es/  
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