TY - JOUR
T1 - The Fort Collins Commuter Study
T2 - Variability in Personal Exposure to Air Pollutants by Microenvironment
AU - Koehler, Kirsten
AU - Good, Nicholas
AU - Wilson, Ander
AU - Mölter, Anna
AU - Moore, Brianna F
AU - Carpenter, Taylor
AU - Peel, Jennifer L
AU - Volckens, John
N1 - This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - This study investigated the role of microenvironment on personal exposures to black carbon (BC), fine particulate mass (PM2.5 ), carbon monoxide (CO), and particle number concentration (PNC) among adult residents of Fort Collins, Colorado, U.S.A. Forty-four participants carried a backpack containing personal monitoring instruments for eight nonconsecutive 24-hour periods. Exposures were apportioned into five microenvironments: Home, Work, Transit, Eateries, and Other. Personal exposures exhibited wide heterogeneity that was dominated by within-person variability (both day-to-day and between microenvironment variability). Linear mixed-effects models were used to compare mean personal exposures in each microenvironments, while accounting for possible within-person correlation. Mean personal exposures during Transit and at Eateries tended to be higher than exposures at Home, where participants spent the majority of their time. Compared to Home, mean exposures to BC in Transit were, on average, 129% [95% confidence interval: 101% 162%] higher and exposures to PNC were 180% [101% 289%] higher in Eateries. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
AB - This study investigated the role of microenvironment on personal exposures to black carbon (BC), fine particulate mass (PM2.5 ), carbon monoxide (CO), and particle number concentration (PNC) among adult residents of Fort Collins, Colorado, U.S.A. Forty-four participants carried a backpack containing personal monitoring instruments for eight nonconsecutive 24-hour periods. Exposures were apportioned into five microenvironments: Home, Work, Transit, Eateries, and Other. Personal exposures exhibited wide heterogeneity that was dominated by within-person variability (both day-to-day and between microenvironment variability). Linear mixed-effects models were used to compare mean personal exposures in each microenvironments, while accounting for possible within-person correlation. Mean personal exposures during Transit and at Eateries tended to be higher than exposures at Home, where participants spent the majority of their time. Compared to Home, mean exposures to BC in Transit were, on average, 129% [95% confidence interval: 101% 162%] higher and exposures to PNC were 180% [101% 289%] higher in Eateries. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
U2 - 10.1111/ina.12533
DO - 10.1111/ina.12533
M3 - Article
C2 - 30586194
SN - 0905-6947
JO - Indoor Air
JF - Indoor Air
ER -