Nearly 3 billion people rely on biomass combustion to meet basic domestic energy needs. Many households use traditional cookstoves to meet these energy needs, which can result in extremely high indoor air pollution concentrations. Indoor air pollution from biomass combustion accounts for an estimated 3.9 million premature deaths per year, representing about 4.8% of the global disease burden. Improved stove designs have the potential to substantially reduce indoor air pollution exposures. However, there are few randomized intervention trials, and previous stove intervention studies have been plagued by low improved stove adoption and sustained use, severely limiting interpretations of these studies. This research proposes to conduct community surveys and in-depth interviews among Honduran cookstove users to gain insight into the complex pathways surrounding barriers to and predictors of sustained improved cookstove adoption (among the target population for the proposed intervention). This information will be used to conduct and enhance a randomized improved cookstove intervention among 300 Honduran families, incorporating qualitative and quantitative measures of cookstove use and measuring pre- to post-intervention changes in pollutant exposures and subclinical indicators of cardiovascular health. The primary goals are twofold: * To incorporate community-engaged approaches throughout all aspects of the research * To maximize sustained stove use (thereby maximizing the health impact of the intervention) to achieve valid exposure-response estimates. Both objectives utilize innovative strategies to fill knowledge gaps. The research team will build upon previous studies in Latin America that have focused on identifying and validating appropriate field techniques for exposure and health assessments in rural areas of developing countries. In summary, the proposed project will provide insight regarding barriers/predictors of sustained cookstove adoption, an issue impeding research in this field; assess the relationship between stove use and indicators of cardiovascular health, a substantial and quickly growing disease burden in developing countries; and result in a more comprehensive and valid assessment of the impact of a cookstove intervention.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
222
The participants will change from a traditional wood burning cookstove to a cleaner burning (wood) cookstove called the JUSTA (after visit 2).
The participants will change from a traditional wood burning cookstove to a cleaner burning (wood) cookstove called the JUSTA (after visit 4).
Field site in Honduras
La Esperanza, Intibucá Department, Honduras
Change in Blood pressure
Intention to treat analyses will incorporate the repeated measures within participants and the change in blood pressure comparing assigned stove type will be the primary outcome of interest. Blood pressure is measured at each of 6 visits spaced approximately 6 months apart over the course of 2.5 years.
Time frame: The cleaner burning cookstove will be installed in the homes after 2 visits (after approximately 6 months) and after 4 visits (after approximately 1 yr and 6 months) for half of the population, respectively.
Change in glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c)
Intention to treat analyses will incorporate the repeated measures within participants and the change in HbA1c comparing assigned stove type will be the primary outcome of interest. Blood pressure is measured at each of 6 visits spaced approximately 6 months apart over the course of 2.5 years.
Time frame: The cleaner burning cookstove will be installed in the homes after 2 visits (after approximately 6 months) and after 4 visits (after approximately 1 yr and 6 months) for half of the population, respectively.
Change in C-reactive protein (CRP)
Intention to treat analyses will incorporate the repeated measures within participants and the change in CRP comparing assigned stove type will be the primary outcome of interest. Blood pressure is measured at each of 6 visits spaced approximately 6 months apart over the course of 2.5 years.
Time frame: The cleaner burning cookstove will be installed in the homes after 2 visits (after approximately 6 months) and after 4 visits (after approximately 1 yr and 6 months) for half of the population, respectively.
Change in Inflammation
Inflammatory markers will be measured in dried blood spots collected at each of 6 visits spaced approximately 6 months apart. Exhaled nitric oxide will also be measured at each visit to assess pulmonary inflammation (in a subset of the population). The lab will analyze the dried blood spots after the completion of the study (not at each 6 month interval); planned inflammatory markers (apart from C-reactive protein, which is a primary outcome) are intracellular adhesion molecule (ICAM-1), Serum amyloid A, and vascular endothelial cell adhesion molecule (VCAM-1)
Time frame: The cleaner burning cookstove will be installed in the homes after 2 visits (after approximately 6 months) and after 4 visits (after approximately 1 yr and 6 months) for half of the population, respectively.
Change in metabolomics
The lab will analyze the dried blood spots for untargeted metabolomics after the completion of the study (not at each 6 month interval).
Time frame: The cleaner burning cookstove will be installed in the homes after 2 visits (after approximately 6 months) and after 4 visits (after approximately 1 yr and 6 months) for half of the population, respectively.
Change in augmentation index and central pulse pressure
These outcomes will be assessed using the SphygmoCor XCEL.
Time frame: The cleaner burning cookstove will be installed in the homes after 2 visits (after approximately 6 months) and after 4 visits (after approximately 1 yr and 6 months) for half of the population, respectively.
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