Author/Authors :
Rainer G and Mِlter، نويسنده , , Anna and Lindley، نويسنده , , Sarah and de Vocht، نويسنده , , Frank and Agius، نويسنده , , Raymond and Kerry، نويسنده , , Gina and Johnson، نويسنده , , Katy and Ashmore، نويسنده , , Mike and Terry، نويسنده , , Andrew and Dimitroulopoulou، نويسنده , , Sani and Simpson، نويسنده , , Angela، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
A common problem in epidemiological studies on air pollution is exposure misclassification, because investigators often assume exposure is equivalent to outdoor concentrations at participants’ homes or at the nearest urban monitor.
ms of this study were: (1) to develop a new microenvironmental exposure model (MEEM), combining time-activity data with modelled outdoor and indoor NO2 concentrations; (2) to evaluate MEEM against data collected with Ogawa™ personal samplers (OPS); (3) to compare its performance against datasets typically used in epidemiological studies.
children wore a personal NO2 sampler, kept a time-activity diary and completed a questionnaire. This information was used by MEEM to estimate individuals’ exposures. These were then compared against concentrations measured by OPS, modelled outdoor concentrations at the children’s home (HOME) and concentrations measured at the nearest urban monitoring station (NUM).
an exposure predicted by MEEM (mean = 19.6 μg m−³) was slightly lower than the mean exposure measured by OPS (mean = 20.4 μg m−³). The normalised mean bias factor (0.01) and normalised mean absolute error factor (0.25) suggested good agreement. In contrast, the HOME (mean = 31.2 μg m−³) and NUM (mean = 28.6 μg m−³) methods overpredicted exposure and showed systematic errors.
sults indicate that personal exposure can be modelled by MEEM with an acceptable level of agreement, while methods such as HOME and NUM show a poorer performance.
Keywords :
Personal samplers , NO2 , Schoolchildren , Microenvironments , exposure , Modelling