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Sick building symptoms among hospital workers associated with indoor air quality and personal factors
32
Citations
42
References
2019
Year
EngineeringAir Pollution FiltrationOccupational Health SciencesAir QualitySick Building SymptomsParticulate MatterHospital MedicineIndoor AerosolOccupant ComfortEnvironmental HealthAir Quality MonitoringPublic HealthHospital WorkersIndoor Test RangesEpidemiologyIndoor ClimateHospital EnvironmentEnvironmental EpidemiologyAir Quality IndexIndoor Air QualityAir Pollution
This study assesses the interior air quality and infective factors in a hospital in Turkey to provide data about air quality to protect hospital workers. This study measured indoor air quality in eight different locations in a hospital, including particulate matter (PM 2.5 and PM 1 ), carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, temperature, humidity and microbiological matter. The highest PM 2.5 and PM 1 concentrations were in emergency service, and the highest CO 2 was measured in the paediatric clinic. The poor interior air quality results are the most important cross-sectional data. For all participants, the prevalence of eye, upper respiratory tract, lower respiratory tract, skin and non-specific sick building syndrome symptoms were 23.0%, 40.7%, 22.5%, 36.3% and 63.7%, respectively. When sick building syndrome symptoms and environmental factors were investigated, skin symptoms increased 1.82 times in areas with stagnant air flow (p = 0.046; OR = 1.823; 95% CI: 1.010–3.290). Non-specific symptoms increased 2.17 times in locations with dry indoor air (p = 0.039; OR = 2.176; 95% CI: 1.041–4.549). Hospital workers are exposed to conditions that may increase the risk of a variety of sick building syndrome symptoms. Although the air quality measurements were not above the recommended limits in the hospital, long-term exposures should be considered for those experiencing sick building syndrome-related symptoms.
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