Objectives: To estimate the annual burden of mortality and the associated health costs attributable to air pollution from wood heaters in Armidale.
Design: Health impact assessment (excess annual mortality and financial costs) based upon atmospheric PM measurements.
Setting: Armidale, a regional Australian city (population, 24 504) with high levels of air pollution in winter caused by domestic wood heaters, 1 May 2018 - 30 April 2019.
Main Outcome Measures: Estimated population exposure to PM from wood heaters; estimated numbers of premature deaths and years of life lost.
Results: Fourteen premature deaths (95% CI, 12-17 deaths) per year, corresponding to 210 (95% CI, 172-249) years of life lost, are attributable to long term exposure to wood heater PM pollution in Armidale. The estimated financial cost is $32.8 million (95% CI, $27.0-38.5 million), or $10 930 (95% CI, $9004-12 822) per wood heater per year.
Conclusions: The substantial mortality and financial cost attributable to wood heating in Armidale indicates that effective policies are needed to reduce wood heater pollution, including public education about the effects of wood smoke on health, subsidies that encourage residents to switch to less polluting home heating (perhaps as part of an economic recovery package), assistance for those affected by wood smoke from other people, and regulations that reduce wood heater use (eg, by not permitting new wood heaters and requiring existing units to be removed when houses are sold).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.5694/mja2.51199 | DOI Listing |
Polymers (Basel)
September 2024
Department of Fire Protection, Faculty of Wood Sciences and Technology, Technical University in Zvolen, T.G. Masaryka 24, 960 01 Zvolen, Slovakia.
The study investigates the determination of selected fire properties of spruce wood, specifically the charring rate, using a modified testing method described and registered at the Industrial Property Office of the Slovak Republic PUV 50121-2020, utility model no. 9373. The samples were exposed to a square ceramic infrared heater, FTE-750W, with a power output of 750 W, using which we determined the heat flux as a function of voltage (V).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
April 2024
Menzies Institute for Medical Research, University of Tasmania, Tasmania, Australia; Health Environments and Lives (HEAL) National Research Network, Australia; Centre for Safe Air, NHMRC Centre for Research Excellence, 17 Liverpool Street, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.
Air pollution is the leading environmental risk factor for mortality worldwide. In Australia, residential wood heating is the single largest source of pollution in many regions of the country. Estimates around the world and in some limited locations across Australia have shown that the health burden attributable to wood heating PM is considerable, and that there is great potential to reduce this burden.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
November 2023
Healthy Environments and Lives (HEAL) National Research Network, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.
Low-cost optical sensors are used in many countries to monitor fine particulate (PM) air pollution, especially in cities and towns with large spatial and temporal variation due to woodsmoke pollution. Previous peer-reviewed research derived calibration equations for PurpleAir (PA) sensors by co-locating PA units at a government regulatory air pollution monitoring site in Armidale, NSW, Australia, a town where woodsmoke is the main source of PM pollution. The calibrations enabled the PA sensors to provide accurate estimates of PM that were almost identical to those from the NSW Government reference equipment and allowed the high levels of wintertime PM pollution and the substantial spatial and temporal variation from wood heaters to be quantified, as well as the estimated costs of premature mortality exceeding $10,000 per wood heater per year.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed J Aust
January 2024
Healthy Environments and Lives (HEAL) National Research Network, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT.
Objectives: To estimate the number of deaths and the cost of deaths attributable to wood heater smoke in the Australian Capital Territory.
Study Design: Rapid health impact assessment, based on fine particulate matter (PM ) data from three outdoor air pollution monitors and published exposure-response functions for natural cause mortality attributed to PM exposure.
Setting: Australian Capital Territory (population, 2021: 454 000), 2016-2018, 2021, and 2022 (2019 and 2020 excluded because of the impact of extreme bushfires on air quality).
Small
January 2024
MOE Engineering Research Center of Forestry Biomass Materials and Bioenergy, Research Center of Biomass Clean Utilization, Beijing Key Laboratory of Lignocellulosic Chemistry, College of Materials Science and Technology, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing, 100083, P.R. China.
Robust, ultrathin, and environmental-friendliness papers that synergize high-efficiency electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding, personal thermal management, and wearable heaters are essential for next-generation smart wearable devices. Herein, MXene nanocomposite paper with a nacre-like structure for EMI shielding and electrothermal/photothermal conversion is fabricated by vacuum filtration of Ti C T MXene and modified sawdust. The hydrogen bonding and highly oriented structure enhance the mechanical properties of the modified sawdust/MXene composite paper (SM paper).
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