Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1968980361> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 91 of
91
with 100 items per page.
- W1968980361 endingPage "97" @default.
- W1968980361 startingPage "94" @default.
- W1968980361 abstract "Nearly 3 billion people rely on solid fuel combustion to meet basic domestic energy needs (Rehfuess et al., 2006). Many households use traditional cookstoves to meet these energy needs, resulting in extremely high indoor air pollution concentrations. Household air pollution from biomass and coal combustion accounts for an estimated 3.9 million premature deaths per year, representing about 4.8% of the global disease burden (Smith et al., 2014). Improved, cleaner-burning stove designs have the potential to substantially reduce household air pollution exposures and improve health (Albalak et al., 2001; Bruce et al., 2004; Ezzati & Kammen, 2002; Smith, 2002). However, there are few randomized intervention trials, and previous stove intervention studies focused on health impacts have been plagued by low improved stove adoption and sustained use (Perez-Padilla et al., 2010; Romieu et al., 2009), severely limiting interpretations of these studies. Without addressing the ongoing social and behavioral process of adoption and stove use, the full benefits of stove dissemination programs cannot be realized or estimated (Pine et al., 2011; Rehfuess et al., 2014; Ruiz-Mercado et al., 2011; Troncoso et al., 2007).Several excellent reviews have compiled detailed descriptions of enablers and barriers to stove adoption across a wide variety of cultural and geographical scenarios (Lewis & Pattanayak, 2012; Rehfuess et al., 2014; Puzzolo et al., 2013). Furthermore, Puzzolo et al. (2013) have clearly outlined the complexity involved with promoting the use of improved fuels or stoves and the need to consider a broad range of factors, or constructs, influencing the likelihood of sustained adoption (i.e., fuel and technology characteristics; household and setting characteristics; knowledge and perceptions; financial, tax and subsidy aspects; market development; regulation, legislation, and standards; and programmatic and policy mechanisms).Keeping in mind that the behavior change process is dynamic, it is important to note that these enablers and barriers may interact at multiple levels (e.g., at the individual and community-level) as well as at various stages of change (e.g., intent to change behavior, initial behavior change, and/or sustained behavior change) (Rehfuess et al., 2014; Ruiz-Mercado et al., 2011). Given these recent contributions to the literature, this commentary is not meant to be a comprehensive review of behavior change theory, even within the cookstove research arena. Building upon this emerging body of work, the objective of this commentary is to propose that behavior change methods and theory also need to have a central role in epidemiologic intervention studies evaluating the health effects of cleaner-burning cookstoves – both in the promotion of behavioral change to maximize the health benefit and also in the accurate evaluation of the health impact of the intervention.Given the immense public health impact and the recent increase in efforts to fund large-scale dissemination programs of cleaner-burning cookstoves (Martin et al., 2011), the current research paradigms need to be challenged. It is clear that behavior change is a critical piece of the puzzle. Much of the focus has been placed on developing methods to achieve complete and sustained behavior change with respect to stove use, often with the goal of reaching a target guideline for pollutant concentrations (e.g., World Health Organization air quality guidelines). However, our current knowledge regarding the health benefits of cleaner-burning cookstove programs is severely limited, and the answers are inherently dependent on our ability to describe behavior. Exposure-response is a complex continuum with much uncertainty; we essentially ask the question, where do we expect people to land on the exposure-response curve after a new stove is introduced? In order to understand expected health benefits for a particular stove program we need to accurately predict reductions in exposure, which will vary depending on behaviors surrounding the use of the stove." @default.
- W1968980361 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1968980361 creator A5001753373 @default.
- W1968980361 creator A5021787397 @default.
- W1968980361 creator A5064581441 @default.
- W1968980361 date "2015-03-31" @default.
- W1968980361 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W1968980361 title "Integrating Behavior Change Theory and Measures into Health-Based Cookstove Interventions: A Proposed Epidemiologic Research Agenda" @default.
- W1968980361 cites W1968759223 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W1978153249 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W1991407973 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W1993994304 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2007928377 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2017727507 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2030209192 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2039685255 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2042800582 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2044700744 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2044963255 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2061320251 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2067896285 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2077017111 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2099413506 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2100971644 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2101931207 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2111934533 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2112787621 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2122349249 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2131718774 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2152266649 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2157566180 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2168391307 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2214232866 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W2913255424 @default.
- W1968980361 cites W4244253395 @default.
- W1968980361 doi "https://doi.org/10.1080/10810730.2014.989346" @default.
- W1968980361 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/4387893" @default.
- W1968980361 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25839207" @default.
- W1968980361 hasPublicationYear "2015" @default.
- W1968980361 type Work @default.
- W1968980361 sameAs 1968980361 @default.
- W1968980361 citedByCount "11" @default.
- W1968980361 countsByYear W19689803612015 @default.
- W1968980361 countsByYear W19689803612017 @default.
- W1968980361 countsByYear W19689803612018 @default.
- W1968980361 countsByYear W19689803612019 @default.
- W1968980361 countsByYear W19689803612020 @default.
- W1968980361 countsByYear W19689803612021 @default.
- W1968980361 countsByYear W19689803612022 @default.
- W1968980361 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W1968980361 hasAuthorship W1968980361A5001753373 @default.
- W1968980361 hasAuthorship W1968980361A5021787397 @default.
- W1968980361 hasAuthorship W1968980361A5064581441 @default.
- W1968980361 hasBestOaLocation W19689803611 @default.
- W1968980361 hasConcept C118552586 @default.
- W1968980361 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W1968980361 hasConcept C27415008 @default.
- W1968980361 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W1968980361 hasConcept C75630572 @default.
- W1968980361 hasConcept C99454951 @default.
- W1968980361 hasConceptScore W1968980361C118552586 @default.
- W1968980361 hasConceptScore W1968980361C15744967 @default.
- W1968980361 hasConceptScore W1968980361C27415008 @default.
- W1968980361 hasConceptScore W1968980361C71924100 @default.
- W1968980361 hasConceptScore W1968980361C75630572 @default.
- W1968980361 hasConceptScore W1968980361C99454951 @default.
- W1968980361 hasFunder F4320332161 @default.
- W1968980361 hasIssue "sup1" @default.
- W1968980361 hasLocation W19689803611 @default.
- W1968980361 hasLocation W19689803612 @default.
- W1968980361 hasLocation W19689803613 @default.
- W1968980361 hasLocation W19689803614 @default.
- W1968980361 hasOpenAccess W1968980361 @default.
- W1968980361 hasPrimaryLocation W19689803611 @default.
- W1968980361 hasRelatedWork W1815121818 @default.
- W1968980361 hasRelatedWork W2054737930 @default.
- W1968980361 hasRelatedWork W2057113869 @default.
- W1968980361 hasRelatedWork W2325830741 @default.
- W1968980361 hasRelatedWork W2517312901 @default.
- W1968980361 hasRelatedWork W2943509051 @default.
- W1968980361 hasRelatedWork W296505424 @default.
- W1968980361 hasRelatedWork W2995509499 @default.
- W1968980361 hasRelatedWork W4323305621 @default.
- W1968980361 hasRelatedWork W4366411457 @default.
- W1968980361 hasVolume "20" @default.
- W1968980361 isParatext "false" @default.
- W1968980361 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W1968980361 magId "1968980361" @default.
- W1968980361 workType "article" @default.