Photo by Erin Patrick, Women’s Refugee Commission. Woman and Baby, Thailand.
In addition to establishing health clinics and providing care, health actors undertake education campaigns on the prevention and management of health concerns, including hand-washing and sanitation, for example. When displaced women and children are exposed to noxious smoke and indoor air pollution (IAP) from cooking fires day after day, often for as much as three to seven hours per day, they are prone to respiratory illnesses such as pneumonia. Young children are particularly susceptible to dying from respiratory disease, as their lungs are not fully developed. Gender based violence and physical assault during firewood collection can cause lasting physical and psycho-social damage, and increase the risk of contracting HIV. As fuel gatherers walk many miles and carry several kilos on their backs, they are prone to dehydration, as well as physical pain and injuries. Undercooking food because of a lack of cooking fuel, can lead to foodborne illness. Finally, access to clean, safe and sufficient household energy is also vital for general health care.
Health Resources
General
Indoor Air Pollution
General
Evaluating Household Energy and Health Interventions: A
catalogue of methods
Tools/Manuals/Handbooks
Author: World Health Organization (WHO)
Date: 2008
Synopsis: This catalogue provides
information on a diverse range of methods for evaluating household energy
interventions, as well as basic guidance on choosing between various evaluation
options according to feasibility, organizational objectives, type of
intervention etc.
Programme for Biomass Energy Conservation in Southern
Africa: The role of household energy conservation in HIV/AIDS mitigation
Presentations
Author: Programme for Basic Energy and
Conservation (ProBEC)/German Agency for Technical Cooperation (GTZ)
Date: 2006
Synopsis: This presentation describes
how household energy conservation indirectly mitigates the effects of HIV/AIDS
by decreasing stress, increasing food security/nutrition and reducing
vulnerability to infection through indoor air pollution, for example.
Clinical Management of Rape Survivors: Developing protocols
for use with refugees and internally displaced persons
Guidelines/Standards
Author: World Health Organization (WHO)
& United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
Date: 2004
Synopsis: Intended for qualified health
care professionals, this guide describes best practices in the clinical
management of rape victims in emergency situations. Specifically, this guide
outlines eight steps in clinical management: making preparations, preparing the
survivor for examination, taking the history, collecting forensic evidence,
performing the physical/genital exam, prescribing treatment, counseling, and
follow-up care.
Indoor Air Pollution (IAP)
Technologies to Reduce
Emissions Harmful to Health: Report of a Landscape Analysis of Evidence and
Experience
Reports
Author:
USAID-TRAction Project & University
Research Co., LLC
Date: November 2010
Synopsis: This landscape analysis reports on
evidence linking Indoor Air Pollution (IAP) to adverse health and experiences
with technologies and interventions to mitigate IAP. Specifically, the report
highlights knowledge gaps that remain in the scientific literature that links
IAP exposure to ill-health, identifies challenges in bringing IAP mitigation
technologies to scale and assesses the landscape of international donor support
for these mitigation efforts. Additionally, the report identifies six countries
in Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa suitable for IAP mitigation technology scale-up
and continued research. Lastly, it outlines four priority areas of research and
study.
Environmental Health Risk and the Use of Biomass Stoves in
Sri Lanka
Reports
Author: RTI International
Date: October 2010
Synopsis: This research brief examines environmental
health risks in Sri Lanka due to indoor air pollution (IAP) from biomass stove
use. As Sri Lanka has burgeoning aging and young populations, IAP poses
significant health risks for large segments of the population that are likely
to be at home during biomass stove operation. Further research and analysis are
required to inform public health policy, advocacy and interventions.
Firewood and Pneumonia: A Fatal Combination in Humanitarian
Settings
Reports
Author: Women’s Refugee Commission
Date: 2009
Synopsis: This document outlines the
correlation between displacement and the burning of firewood, which causes
indoor air pollution (IAP) and increases the risk of pneumonia and other acute
lower respiratory infections in children under five. This document also briefly
outlines the objectives of WRC’s Fuel and Firewood Initiative.
Indoor Air Pollution and Lower Respiratory Tract Infections
in Children
Reports
Author: World Health Organization (WHO)
Date: 2007
Synopsis: This document reports on the
preliminary results of a randomized control trial (RCT), presented at the
International Society of Environmental Epidemiology in Paris (2006), examining
the effect of the reduction in air pollution exposures on the health outcomes
of 500 Mayan Indian children in Guatemala, using improved woodstoves with
chimneys as the intervention (versus open wood fires). While more research is
needed, it was concluded that improved stoves reduce IAP and hence the
incidence of acute lower respiratory infection in infants.
Fuel for Life: Household Energy and Health
Reports
Author: World Health Organization (WHO)
Date: 2006
Synopsis: This report describes the
global burden of disease due to indoor air pollution (IAP), energy poverty, the
connection between household energy and the millennium development goals
(MDGs), and the necessary investment and scale up of interventions.
Energie Domestique et Santé: Des combustibles pour vivre mieux
Reports
Auteur: Organisation Mondiale de la
Santé (OMS)
Date: 2006
Synopsis: Ce
rapport décrit la charge mondiale de morbidité due à la pollution de l’air
intérieur, la pauvreté énergétique, les liens entre l’énergie domestique et les
objectifs de millénaire pour le développement (OMD), et l'investissement et
l’échelle nécessaire pour des interventions efficaces.
Energía Doméstica y Salud:
Combustible para una vida mejor
Reports
Autor:
Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS)
Fecha: 2006
Sinopsis:
Este informe describe la carga mundial de morbilidad debido a la contaminación
del aire en interiores, la pobreza de energía, la conexión entre la energía doméstica
y los objetivos de desarrollo del milenio (ODM), y la inversión necesaria y el
aumento de intervenciones.
Guidelines for conducting cost-benefit analysis of household
energy and health interventions
Guidelines/Standards
Author: World Health Organization (WHO)
Date: 2006
Synopsis: These guidelines introduce
the cost-benefit framework for evaluating household energy interventions to
reduce indoor air pollution (IAP). These guidelines describe the approach in a
step-by-step manner and are intended for economists and professionals working
on household energy, the environment and health.
Indoor Air Pollution and Household Energy Monitoring:
Workshop Resources
Tools/Manuals/Handbooks
Author: World Health Organization (WHO)
Date: 2005
Synopsis: These workshop resources
provide training on how to monitor and evaluate interventions and programs
aimed at ameliorating the negative health and social effects of indoor air
pollution (IAP).
Indoor Air Pollution, Health and the Burden of Disease
Reports
Author: World Health Organization (WHO)
Date: 2005
Synopsis: This is WHO’s second thematic briefing on indoor
air pollution: its health effects and the global burden of disease by
geographic region.
Indoor air pollution from solid fuels and risk of low birth
weight and still birth
Reports
Author: World Health Organization (WHO)
Date: September 2005
Synopsis: This report summarizes the
evidence linking maternal/fetal exposure to indoor air pollution (IAP) to both
low birth weight (LBW) and stillbirth, as reviewed in a symposium held at ISEE
2005 in Johannesburg. It concludes that there is consistent evidence linking
solid fuel exposure with both LBW and stillbirth outcomes.
Indoor Smoke from Solid Fuels: Assessing the environmental
burden of disease at national and local levels
Tools/Manuals/Handbooks
Author: World Health Organization (WHO)
Date: 2004
Synopsis: This guide outlines a method
for estimating the disease burden caused by household exposures to indoor smoke
from solid fuels, using a combination of exposure levels and relative risks.
This guide is designed to help policy-makers identify and prioritize
environmental and public health interventions, at national or local levels.
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