Schools’ air quality monitoring for health and education : Methods and protocols of the SAMHE initiative and project

(2023) Schools’ air quality monitoring for health and education : Methods and protocols of the SAMHE initiative and project. Developments in the Built Environment. 100266. ISSN 2666-1659

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Copyright, Publisher and Additional Information: Funding Information: The ‘School Air quality Monitoring for Health and Education’ project, SAMHE - an extension of the CO-TRACE project, was funded by the EPSRC under grant number EP/W001411/1 , and received additional funding from the UK's Department for Education . Funding Information: During the developmental stages associated with school ages, children are particularly vulnerable to air pollution because of their high activity levels and developing lungs, which intake more air relative to their body mass compared to adults (Schwartz, 2004). Cumulative evidence points towards an association between school-based exposure to traffic-related pollutants and health outcomes, including increased illness-related absenteeism (Zhang et al., 2022), asthma incidence (Gasana et al., 2012) and asthma exacerbation (Guarnieri and Balmes, 2014). A causal linkage between air pollution exposure and suboptimal lung growth has been further supported by analysis of consecutive longitudinal cohorts in the Children's Health Study (Gauderman et al., 2015) in which the proportion of children with clinically small lungs was reduced as air quality improved between 1994 and 2011. Rising respiratory disease has led to an increasing research focus on indoor air quality in schools and highlighted the need (see §1.5) for the collection and analysis of large-scale datasets of school environments. This can provide more reliable exposure estimates in epidemiological research to draw more reliable health associations. The methods of the SAMHE initiative seek to meet this need in the UK and support others around the world to follow suit; the SAMHE project is working to deploy these novel and scalable methods to around 2 000 schools, as described in this paper.Schools are spread across all of the deciles of the Index of Multiple Deprivation, an index which allows comparison within England, Scotland and Wales of the levels of deprivation according to seven domains of deprivation. Of the 123 Pioneer schools, 22 schools were in the bottom two deciles (most deprived) and 29 were in the top two deciles (least deprived) with a fairly even distribution in the other deciles. A higher percentage of fee-paying schools (18.7%) than is representative for the UK were within Pioneer schools. Pioneer school sizes range from less than 100 pupils (3.3% of schools) to those with more than 1 000 (34.1% of schools), and educate ages 5–18, with the largest number of schools teaching ages 11–16. West 2023 (Under review) presents further details of the co-design process that developed the SAMHE Web App.Communications for the launch used similar mechanisms, but greatly scaled up. Additional promotion routes included a press release by the University of York and coverage in the SAMHE newsletter. Many more school-facing organisations and other stakeholders were directly contacted and the social media reach was much larger. Recruitment of schools in England was boosted by the inclusion of SAMHE information in the DfE sector bulletin, and coverage in a dedicated feature on the BBC Newsround programme. Following slower uptake in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, additional efforts were made to reach schools in those countries, via government contacts and through direct emailing of schools. We also encouraged Co-Design and Pioneer schools to seek local media coverage of their activities as part of our promotion, supporting them by providing a template media pack and guidance. We are not aware that any did so.Secondly, the SAMHE project will exploit the richness of the existing “condition data collection” (CDC) database. 3 The CDC collects building condition, asset and management information on every government-funded educational establishment in England. The CDC database has been collected with the aim to direct future funding allocations to the areas with the greatest need, and to identify school buildings for inclusion in future rebuilding programmes. Cross-referencing parts of contextual data gathered by user's inputs into the Web App with that within the CDC data will enable a degree of quality assurance for both datasets.The ‘School Air quality Monitoring for Health and Education’ project, SAMHE - an extension of the CO-TRACE project, was funded by the EPSRC under grant number EP/W001411/1, and received additional funding from the UK's Department for Education. Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Author(s)
Keywords: Carbon dioxide, Co-design, Low-cost sensor networks, Particulate matter, School engagement, Thermal conditions, Total volatile organic compounds, Ventilation rates
Dates:
  • Accepted: 2 November 2023
  • Published: 2 December 2023
Institution: The University of York
Academic Units: The University of York > Research Groups (York) > Stockholm Environment Institute at York (York)
The University of York > Faculty of Social Sciences (York) > Centre for Reviews and Dissemination (York)
Depositing User: Pure (York)
Date Deposited: 15 Dec 2023 11:00
Last Modified: 16 Jan 2024 00:21
Published Version: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dibe.2023.100266
Status: Published
Refereed: Yes
Identification Number: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dibe.2023.100266
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Description: Schools’ air quality monitoring for health and education: Methods and protocols of the SAMHE initiative and project

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