Investigating the association between wood and charcoal domestic cooking, respiratory symptoms and acute respiratory infections among children aged under 5 years in Uganda: A cross-sectional analysis of the 2015/16 Demographic and Health Survey

Katherine Woolley, Tusubira Bagambe, Ajit Singh, William Avis, Telesphore Kabera, Abel Weldetinsae, Shelton Mariga, Bruce Kirenga, Francis Pope, G Neil Thomas, Suzanne Bartington

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1 Citation (Scopus)
200 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Household air pollution associated with biomass (wood, dung, charcoal, and crop residue) cooking contributes to approximately 4 million deaths each year worldwide, with the greatest burden in low and middle-income countries. We investigated the relationship between solid fuel type and respiratory symptoms in Uganda, where 96% of households use biomass as the primary domestic fuel. Materials and Methods: Cross-sectional study of 15,405 pre-school aged children living in charcoal or wood-burning households in Uganda, using data from the 2016 Demographic and Health Survey. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was used to identify the associations between occurrence of a cough, shortness of breath , fever, acute respiratory infection (ARI) and severe ARI with cooking fuel type (wood, charcoal); with additional sub-analyses by contextual status (urban, rural). Results: After adjustment for household and individual level confounding factors, wood fuel use was associated with increased risk of shortness of breath (AOR:1.33 [1.10-1.60]), fever (AOR:1.26 [1.08-1.48]), cough (AOR:1.15 [1.00-1.33]), ARI (AOR:1.36 [1.11-1.66] and severe ARI (AOR:1.41 [1.09-1.85]), compared to charcoal fuel. In urban areas, Shortness of breath (AOR:1.84 [1.20-2.83]), ARI (AOR:1.77 [1.10-2.79]) and in rural areas ARI (AOR:1.23 [1.03-1.47]) and risk of fever (AOR:1.23 [1.03-1.47]) were associated with wood fuel usage. Conclusion Risk of respiratory symptoms was higher among children living in wood compared to charcoal fuel-burning households, with policy implications for mitigation of associated harmful health impacts.
Keywords: Acute Respiratory Infection; biomass fuel; household air pollution; respiratory symptoms; Uganda
Original languageEnglish
Article number3974
Pages (from-to)1-14
JournalInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Volume17
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 4 Jun 2020

Keywords

  • Acute Respiratory Infection
  • Uganda
  • biomass fuel
  • household air pollution
  • respiratory symptoms

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