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More effective home heating reduces school absences for children with asthma

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posted on 2024-02-24, 01:33 authored by S Free, P Howden-Chapman, N Pierse, H Viggers
BACKGROUND: New Zealand homes are underheated by international standards, with average indoor temperatures below the WHO recommended minimum of 18 degrees C. Research has highlighted the connection between low indoor temperatures and adverse health outcomes, including social functioning and psychological well-being. Both health effects and social effects can impact on school absence rates. The aim of this study was to determine whether more effective home heating affects school absence for children with asthma. METHODS: A single-blinded randomised controlled trial of heating intervention in 409 households containing an asthmatic child aged 6-12 years, where the previous heating was an open fire, plug-in electric heater or unflued gas heater. The intervention was the installation of a more effective heater of at least 6 kW before the winter of 2006 in half the houses. Demographic and health information was collected both before and after the intervention. Each child's school was contacted directly and term-by-term absence information for that child obtained for 2006 and previous years where available. RESULTS: Complete absence data were obtained for 269 out of 409 children. Compared with the control group, children in households receiving the intervention experienced on average 21% (p=0.02) fewer days of absence after allowing for the effects of other factors. CONCLUSION: More effective, non-indoor polluting heating reduces school absence for asthmatic children.

History

Preferred citation

Free, S., Howden-Chapman, P., Pierse, N. & Viggers, H. (2010). More effective home heating reduces school absences for children with asthma. Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health, 64(5), 379-386. https://doi.org/10.1136/jech.2008.086520

Journal title

Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health

Volume

64

Issue

5

Publication date

2010-05-01

Pagination

379-386

Publisher

BMJ

Publication status

Published

Contribution type

Article

Online publication date

2009-09-23

ISSN

0143-005X

eISSN

1470-2738

Language

en