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Does Improving Insulation and Heating Improve Health?

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Asthma
Registration Number
NCT00489762
Lead Sponsor
University of Otago
Brief Summary

The Housing, Heating and Health Study has enrolled 409 households with ineffective heaters, who have a child with asthma between 6 and 12 years.

In the winter of 2005, houses were insulated and baseline measures taken of indoor temperatures, nitrogen dioxide, with more intensive indoor air quality monitoring in a sub-sample of 33 homes.

Objective data are being collected on the household's health and energy usage. The households randomly assigned to the intervention group will have new heaters installed over the summer.

Results will be available after the follow-up data collection in 2006.

Detailed Description

1. Introduction New Zealand houses are relatively poorly constructed and maintained for the temperate climate and most homes are heated to less than the WHO recommended minimum winter temperature of 18°C. Excess winter mortality is comparable to the levels in Portugal and Scotland. The Group's previous Housing, Insulation and Health Study has shown that insulating existing homes leads to a small but significant improvement in health and energy consumption, but raised the question as to whether installing more sustainable heating could increase these gains.

2. Study design

We have enrolled 409 households, who use either plug-in electric heaters or unflued gas heating, and where there is a child with asthma, aged between 6 and 12 years. In the winter of 2005, uninsulated houses were insulated and baseline measures taken of indoor temperatures in the living room and the child's bedroom, and levels of nitrogen dioxide. Intensive monitoring of indoor air quality is being carried out in a sub-sample of 33 homes. All members of the child's family have filled out detailed questionnaires of their health and the heads-of -household have completed a questionnaire on the characteristics of the household's energy usage. Objective measures are also being collected of the household's fuel bills, the child's attendance at school and the family's health care utilisation.

Households are randomised so that the intervention group will have their choice of new, more efficient and sustainable heaters (heat pumps, wood pellet burners, or flued gas heaters) that heat more of the house and which emit no internal emissions installed over the summer. In the winter of 2006, follow-up measures will be taken and then the control households will receive their choice of new heaters.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
409
Inclusion Criteria
  • Household has asthmatic child between 6 and 12, is living in study area, and will not be moving in the two years after applying to join the study.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Heating of good quality and comparable to heater that will be installed by the study

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Asthma SymptomsOne year
FEV1One year
Children's days off school and general practitioner visitsOne year
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Energy usageOne year
HospitalisationOne year
Temperature in the HomeFour months

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Otago

🇳🇿

Wellington, New Zealand

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