Who suffers from indoor air pollution? Evidence from Bangladesh

Type Working Paper
Title Who suffers from indoor air pollution? Evidence from Bangladesh
Author(s)
Issue 3428
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2004
URL http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=625306
Abstract
In this paper the authors investigate individuals' exposure to indoor air pollution. Using new survey data from Bangladesh, they analyze exposure at two levels - differences within households attributable to family roles, and differences across households attributable to income and education. Within households, they relate individuals' exposure to pollution in different locations during their daily round of activity. The authors find high levels of exposure for children and adolescents of both sexes, with particularly serious exposure for children under 5. Among prime-age adults, they find that men have half the exposure of women (whose exposure is similar to that of children and adolescents). They also find that elderly men have significantly lower exposure than elderly women. Across households, they draw on results from their previous paper (Dasgupta and others, 2004), which relate pollution variation across households to choices of cooking fuel, cooking locations, construction materials, and ventilation practices. They find that these choices are significantly affected by family income and adult education levels (particularly for women). Overall, the authors find that the poorest, least-educated households have twice the pollution levels of relatively high-income households with highly-educated adults.
Overall, we find that young children and poorly-educated women in poor households face pollution exposures that are four times those for men in higher-income households organized by more highlyeducated women. In our previous paper, we recommended feasible changes in cooking locations, construction materials and ventilation practices that could greatly reduce average household pollution levels. In this paper, we consider measures for narrowing the exposure gap among individuals within households. We focus particularly on changes for infants and young children, since they suffer the worst mortality and morbidity from indoor air pollution, but our findings also apply to women and adolescents. Our recommendations for reducing their exposure are based on a few simple, robust findings: Hourly pollution levels in cooking and living areas are quite similar because cooking smoke diffuses rapidly and nearly-completely into living areas. However, outdoor pollution is far lower. At present, young children are only outside for an average of 3 hours per day. For children in a typical household, pollution exposure can be halved by adopting two simple measures: increasing their outdoor time from 3 to 5 or 6 hours per day, and concentrating outdoor time during peak cooking periods. We recognize that weather and other factors may intervene occasionally, and that child supervision outdoors may be difficult for some households. However, the potential benefits are so great that neighbors might well agree to pool outdoor supervision once they became aware of the implications for their children’s health.

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