Effect of improved cookstove intervention on childhood acute lower respiratory infection in Northwest Ethiopia: a cluster-randomized controlled trial

Mesafint Molla Adane, Getu Degu Alene, Seid Tiku Mereta, Kristina L Wanyonyi, Mesafint Molla Adane, Getu Degu Alene, Seid Tiku Mereta, Kristina L Wanyonyi

Abstract

Background: Household air pollution exposure is linked with over 3.5 million premature deaths every year, ranking highest among environmental risk factors globally. Children are uniquely vulnerable and sensitive to the damaging health effects of household air pollution which includes childhood acute lower respiratory infection (ALRI). The use of improved cookstoves has been widely encouraged to reduce these health burdens. It is, however, unclear as to whether it is possible to prevent household air pollution-related disease burdens with biomass-fuelled improved cookstove intervention and the evidence regarding its child health effect still attracts wide debate. Therefore, we investigated the child health effect of improved baking stove intervention compared with the continuation of the open burning traditional baking stove.

Methods: A cluster-randomized controlled trial was conducted to assess the health effect of improved baking stove intervention. A total of 100 clusters were randomly allocated to both arms at a 1:1 ratio, and a total of four follow-up visits were carried out within 1 year immediately after the delivery of the intervention to all households allocated into the intervention arm. Data were analyzed in SPSS-22, and the intervention effect was estimated using a Generalized Estimating Equations modeling approach among the intention-to-treat population.

Results: A total of 5508 children were enrolled in the study across 100 randomly selected clusters in both arms, among which data were obtained from a total of 5333 participants for at least one follow-up visit which establishes the intention-to-treat population dataset. The intervention was not found to have a statistically significant effect on the longitudinal childhood ALRI with an estimated odds ratio of 0.95 (95% CI: 0.89-1.02). Nevertheless, the longitudinal change in childhood ALRI was significantly associated with age, baseline childhood ALRI, location of cooking quarter, secondary stove type and frequency of baking event measured at baseline.

Conclusions: We found no evidence that an intervention comprising biomass-fuelled improved baking stove reduced the risk of childhood ALRI compared with the continuation of an open burning traditional baking stove. Therefore, effective cooking solutions are needed to avert the adverse health effect of household air pollution, particularly, childhood ALRI.

Trial registration: The trial was registered on August 2, 2018 at clinical trials.gov registry database (registration identifier number: NCT03612362).

Keywords: Acute lower respiratory infection; Biomass-fuelled; Childhood; Household air pollution; Improved cookstove.

Conflict of interest statement

None declared under financial, general, and institutional competing interests.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Flow diagram of study progress from eligibility assessment to enrollment, follow-up, and analysis for the trial study entitled effect of improved cookstove intervention on childhood acute lower respiratory infection in Northwest Ethiopia
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Childhood acute lower respiratory infection rates by round and arm for the trial study entitled effect of improved cookstove intervention on childhood acute lower respiratory infection in Northwest Ethiopia

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Source: PubMed

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