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Title: The home air in agriculture pediatric intervention (HAPI) trial: Rationale and methods.

Authors: Masterson, Erin E; Younglove, Lisa B; Perez, Adriana; Torres, Elizabeth; Krenz, Jennifer E; Tchong French, Maria I; Riederer, Anne M; Sampson, Paul D; Metwali, Nervana; Min, Esther; Jansen, Karen L; Aisenberg, Gino; Babadi, Ryan S; Farquhar, Stephanie A; Thorne, Peter S; Karr, Catherine J

Published In Contemp Clin Trials, (2020 09)

Abstract: BACKGROUND: Data addressing air quality effects on children with asthma in rural U.S. communities are rare. Our community engaged research partnership previously demonstrated associations between neighborhood NH3 and ambient PM2.5 and asthma in the agricultural lower Yakima Valley of Washington. As a next step, the partnership desired an intervention approach to address concerns about pediatric asthma in this largely Latino immigrant, farm worker community. OBJECTIVE: The Home Air in Agriculture Pediatric Intervention (HAPI) sought to examine the effectiveness of enrichment of an existing asthma education program with portable high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) cleaners designed to reduce PM2.5 and NH3. We investigated the effect of this enriched approach on these exposures and asthma health measures. DESIGN: We randomized children with poorly controlled asthma to a control arm (current asthma education program) or an intervention arm (current asthma education program + placement of two indoor air cleaners in the family's home). Outcomes included (1) 14-day integrated samples of indoor air contaminants (PM2.5 and NH3) at baseline and one-year follow-up and (2) child asthma health metrics at baseline, midpoint (4-6 months) and one-year follow-up. These included the Asthma Control Test, symptoms days, clinical utilization, oral corticosteroid use, pulmonary function, fractional exhaled nitric oxide, and urinary leukotriene E4 concentration. DISCUSSION: To our knowledge, this is the first randomized HEPA cleaner intervention designed to assess NH3 as well as PM2.5 and to evaluate health outcomes of children with asthma in an agricultural region.

PubMed ID: 32721578 Exiting the NIEHS site

MeSH Terms: Agriculture; Asthma*; Child; Humans; Research Design; Washington

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