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Cooking fuels and risk of all-cause and cardiopulmonary mortality in urban China: a prospective cohort study

Authors :
Kuai Yu, PhD
Jun Lv, PhD
Gaokun Qiu, PhD
Canqing Yu, PhD
Yu Guo, MSc
Zheng Bian, MSc
Ling Yang, PhD
Yiping Chen, DPhil
Chaolong Wang, ProfPhD
An Pan, ProfPhD
Liming Liang, ProfPhD
Frank B Hu, ProfPhD
Zhengming Chen, ProfDPhil
Liming Li, ProfMPH
Tangchun Wu, ProfPhD
Junshi Chen
Zhengming Chen
Robert Clarke
Rory Collins
Yu Guo
Liming Li
Jun Lv
Richard Peto
Robin Walters
Daniel Avery
Ruth Boxall
Yumei Chang
Yiping Chen
Huaidong Du
Simon Gilbert
Alex Hacker
Mike Hill
Michael Holmes
Andri Iona
Christiana Kartsonaki
Rene Kerosi
Ling Kong
Om Kurmi
Garry Lancaster
Sarah Lewington
Kuang Lin
John McDonnell
Iona Millwood
Qunhua Nie
Jayakrishnan Radhakrishnan
Paul Ryder
Sam Sansome
Dan Schmidt
Paul Sherliker
Rajani Sohoni
Becky Stevens
Iain Turnbull
Jenny Wang
Lin Wang
Neil Wright
Ling Yang
Xiaoming Yang
Zheng Bian
Xiao Han
Can Hou
Pei Pei
Chao Liu
Yunlong Tan
Canqing Yu
Zengchang Pang
Ruqin Gao
Shanpeng Li
Shaojie Wang
Yongmei Liu
Ranran Du
Yajing Zang
Liang Cheng
Xiaocao Tian
Hua Zhang
Yaoming Zhai
Feng Ning
Xiaohui Sun
Feifei Li
Silu Lv
Junzheng Wang
Wei Hou
Mingyuan Zeng
Ge Jiang
Xue Zhou
Liqiu Yang
Hui He
Bo Yu
Yanjie Li
Qinai Xu
Quan Kang
Ziyan Guo
Dan Wang
Ximin Hu
Hongmei Wang
Jinyan Chen
Yan Fu
Zhenwang Fu
Xiaohuan Wang
Min Weng
Zhendong Guo
Shukuan Wu
Yilei Li
Huimei Li
Zhifang Fu
Ming Wu
Yonglin Zhou
Jinyi Zhou
Ran Tao
Jie Yang
Jian Su
Fang Liu
Jun Zhang
Yihe Hu
Yan Lu
Liangcai Ma
Aiyu Tang
Shuo Zhang
Jianrong Jin
Jingchao Liu
Zhenzhu Tang
Naying Chen
Ying Huang
Mingqiang Li
Jinhuai Meng
Rong Pan
Qilian Jiang
Jian Lan
Yun Liu
Liuping Wei
Liyuan Zhou
Ningyu Chen
Ping Wang
Fanwen Meng
Yulu Qin
Sisi Wang
Xianping Wu
Ningmei Zhang
Xiaofang Chen
Weiwei Zhou
Guojin Luo
Jianguo Li
Xunfu Zhong
Jiaqiu Liu
Qiang Sun
Pengfei Ge
Xiaolan Ren
Caixia Dong
Hui Zhang
Enke Mao
Xiaoping Wang
Tao Wang
Xi Zhang
Ding Zhang
Gang Zhou
Shixian Feng
Liang Chang
Lei Fan
Yulian Gao
Tianyou He
Huarong Sun
Pan He
Chen Hu
Xukui Zhang
Huifang Wu
Min Yu
Ruying Hu
Hao Wang
Yijian Qian
Chunmei Wang
Kaixu Xie
Lingli Chen
Yidan Zhang
Dongxia Pan
Qijun Gu
Yuelong Huang
Biyun Chen
Li Yin
Huilin Liu
Zhongxi Fu
Qiaohua Xu
Xin Xu
Hao Zhang
Huajun Long
Xianzhi Li
Libo Zhang
Zhe Qiu
Source :
The Lancet Global Health, Vol 8, Iss 3, Pp e430-e439 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2020.

Abstract

Summary: Background: Cooking practice has transitioned from use of solid fuels to use of clean fuels, with addition of better ventilation facilities. However, the change in mortality risk associated with such a transition remains unclear. Methods: The China Kadoorie Biobank (CKB) Study enrolled participants (aged 30–79 years) from ten areas across China; we chose to study participants from five urban areas where transition from use of solid fuels to clean fuels for cooking was prevalent. Participants who reported regular cooking (weekly or more frequently) at baseline were categorised as persistent clean fuel users, previous solid fuel users, or persistent solid fuel users, according to self-reported fuel use histories. All-cause and cardiopulmonary mortality were identified through linkage to China's Disease Surveillance Point system and local mortality records. Findings: Between June 24, 2004, and July 15, 2008, 226 186 participants living in five urban areas of China were enrolled in the CKB Study. Among 171 677 participants who reported cooking regularly (weekly or more frequently), 75 785 (44%) were persistent clean fuel users, 80 511 (47%) were previous solid fuel users, and 15 381 (9%) were persistent solid fuel users. During a mean of 9·8 (SD 1·7) years of follow-up, 10 831 deaths were documented, including 3819 cardiovascular deaths and 761 respiratory deaths. Compared with persistent clean fuel users, persistent solid fuel users had significantly higher risks of all-cause mortality (hazard ratio [HR] 1·19, 95% CI 1·10–1·28), cardiovascular mortality (1·24, 1·10–1·39), and respiratory mortality (1·43, 1·10–1·85). The excess risk of all-cause and cardiopulmonary mortality fell by more than 60% in 5 years after cessation of solid fuel use and continued to decrease afterwards. Use of ventilation was associated with lower all-cause mortality risk, even among persistent clean fuel users (HR 0·78, 0·69–0·89). Interpretation: Solid fuel use for cooking is associated with a higher risk of mortality, and cessation of solid fuel use cuts excess mortality risks swiftly and substantially within 5 years. Ventilation use also lowers the risk of mortality, even among people who persistently use clean fuels. It is of prime importance for both policy makers and the public to accelerate the transition from solid fuels to clean fuels and promote efficient ventilation to minimise further adverse health effects. Funding: National Natural Science Foundation of China, Wellcome Trust, and Kadoorie Charitable Foundation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2214109X
Volume :
8
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Lancet Global Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.7ebfd1129d4b8fb60f4fdec171dc1c
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(19)30525-X