An introduction to the indirect exposure assessment approach: modeling human exposure using microenvironmental measurements and the recent National Human Activity Pattern Survey.
- 1 May 1999
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Environmental Health Perspectives in Environmental Health Perspectives
- Vol. 107 (suppl 2) , 365-374
- https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.99107s2365
Abstract
Indirect exposure approaches offer a feasible and accurate method for estimating population exposures to indoor pollutants, including environmental tobacco smoke (ETS). In an effort to make the indirect exposure assessment approach more accessible to people in the health and risk assessment fields, this paper provides examples using real data from (italic>a(/italic>) a week-long personal carbon monoxide monitoring survey conducted by the author; and (italic>b(/italic>) the 1992 to 1994 National Human Activity Pattern Survey (NHAPS) for the United States. The indirect approach uses measurements of exposures in specific microenvironments (e.g., homes, bars, offices), validated microenvironmental models (based on the mass balance equation), and human activity pattern data obtained from questionnaires to predict frequency distributions of exposure for entire populations. This approach requires fewer resources than the direct approach to exposure assessment, for which the distribution of monitors to a representative sample of a given population is necessary. In the indirect exposure assessment approach, average microenvironmental concentrations are multiplied by the total time spent in each microenvironment to give total integrated exposure. By assuming that the concentrations encountered in each of 10 location categories are the same for different members of the U.S. population (i.e., the NHAPS respondents), the hypothetical contribution that ETS makes to the average 24-hr respirable suspended particle exposure for Americans working their main job is calculated in this paper to be 18 microg/m3. This article is an illustrative review and does not contain an actual exposure assessment or model validation.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Activity patterns of Californians: Use of and proximity to indoor pollutant sourcesPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Validity of the uniform mixing assumption: determining human exposure to environmental tobacco smoke.Environmental Health Perspectives, 1999
- Mathematical models for predicting indoor air quality from smoking activity.Environmental Health Perspectives, 1999
- Exposure to toxic air contaminants in environmental tobacco smoke: an assessment for California based on personal monitoring data.1998
- Particle Concentrations Inside a Tavern Before and After Prohibition of Smoking: Evaluating the Performance of an Indoor Air Quality ModelJournal of the Air & Waste Management Association, 1996
- A Multiple-Smoker Model for Predicting Indoor Air Quality in Public LoungesEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1996
- A population-based exposure model for benzene.1995
- The Total Exposure Assessment Methodology (TEAM) Study: An Analysis of Exposures, Sources, and Risks Associated with Four Volatile Organic ChemicalsJournal of the American College of Toxicology, 1989
- Validation of the simulation of human activity and pollutant exposure (SHAPE) model using paired days from the Denver, CO, carbon monoxide field studyAtmospheric Environment (1967), 1988
- Models for human exposure to air pollutionEnvironment International, 1982