Investigating Cooking Activity Patterns and Perceptions of Air Quality Interventions among Women in Urban Rwanda
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Setting and Participants
2.2. Study Design and Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
2.4. Ethical Approval
3. Results
3.1. Cooking Activity Patterns
3.2. Awareness of the Health Risks Associated with Exposure to Cooking Smoke
3.3. Perceptions of Air Quality Interventions
4. Discussion
4.1. Cooking Activity Patterns
4.2. Awareness of the Health Risks Associated with Exposure to Cooking Smoke
4.3. Perceptions and Acceptability of Air Quality Interventions
4.4. Potential Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Cooking Activities Questionnaire
Number of household members: | Main cook in household: | Age of main cook: | Age of Mother: | Number of children less than 5 years: |
- □
- Wood
- □
- Charcoal
- □
- Dung
- □
- Crop residues
- □
- Other (please specify) _______________________________
- □
- Yes (please specify) ___________________________
- □
- No
- □
- Unsure
- □
- Cost
- □
- Tradition
- □
- Family
- □
- Taste of food
- □
- Time of year
- □
- Other (please specify) ________________________________
- □
- Yourself
- □
- Family member (please specify) _________________________
- □
- Other (please specify) ___________________
- □
- Yourself
- □
- Family member (please specify) _________________________
- □
- Other (please specify) ___________________
- □
- Delivery
- □
- In an internal room within the main house
- □
- In a separate room/building attached to the main house (shared wall)
- □
- In a separate building not attached to the main house
- □
- Outside
- □
- Other (please specify) ___________________________
- □
- Yes
- □
- No
- □
- 1
- □
- 2
- □
- 3
- □
- 4
- □
- ≥5
- □
- Yes
- □
- No (please comment why) ____________________
- □
- Unsure
- □
- Accompanying mother
- □
- Assistance with food prep or cooking
- □
- Socialising
- □
- Other (please specify) ___________________________________
- (a.)
- The cookstove is lit
- (b.)
- You (the mother) are in the cooking area
- (c.)
- The main cook is in the cooking area (if the mother is not the main cook)
- (d.)
- Any children (<5 years) are in the kitchen
Time: | Cookstove Alight: | Main Cook in Cooking Area: | Mother in Cooking Area: | Child (<5) in Cooking Area: |
06:00–07:00 | ||||
07:00–08:00 | ||||
08:00–09:00 | ||||
09:00–10:00 | ||||
10:00–11:00 | ||||
11:00–12:00 | ||||
12:00–13:00 | ||||
13:00–14:00 | ||||
14:00–15:00 | ||||
15:00–16:00 | ||||
16:00–17:00 | ||||
17:00–18:00 | ||||
18:00–19:00 | ||||
19:00–20:00 | ||||
20:00–21:00 | ||||
21:00–22:00 | ||||
22:00–06:00 |
- □
- Yes
- □
- No
- □
- Unsure
- □
- Yes
- □
- No
- □
- Unsure
- □
- Yes
- □
- No
- □
- Unsure
- □
- Yes
- □
- No
- □
- Unsure
Symptom: | Mother: | Children: (<5years) | ||
Child 1 | Child 2 | Child 3 | ||
Cough | ||||
Breathing problems | ||||
Eye problems | ||||
Runny nose | ||||
Itchy skin | ||||
Other (please specify) |
- □
- Yes (please specify) _______________________________
- □
- No
- □
- Unsure
- □
- Yes
- □
- No
- □
- Unsure
- □
- Yes
- □
- No
- □
- Unsure
- □
- Yes
- □
- No
- □
- Unsure
- □
- Yes–interested a lot
- □
- Yes–interested a little
- □
- Ambivalent
- □
- No
- □
- Unsure
- □
- Worried about cost
- □
- Safety concerns (please detail)________________________________________
- □
- Inconvenient to use
- □
- Concerned food might taste differently
- □
- Don’t want to change from tradition
- □
- Other members of the family don’t want it
- □
- No perceived benefit
- □
- Other (please specify) ___________________________
- □
- Mobile–can be moved
- □
- Fixed–cannot be moved
- □
- Cooks food more efficiently (faster)
- □
- Has space for more than one pan
- □
- Maintains ability to cook traditional foods
- □
- Other (please specify) _____________________________
- □
- Yes–interested a lot
- □
- Yes–interested a little
- □
- Ambivalent
- □
- No
- □
- Unsure
- □
- Worried about cost
- □
- Safety concerns (please detail) ________________________
- □
- Inconvenient to use
- □
- Concerned food might taste differently
- □
- Don’t want to change from tradition
- □
- Other members of the family don’t want to use it
- □
- No perceived benefit
- □
- Other (please specify) ___________________________
- □
- No concerns
- □
- Worried about cost
- □
- Safety concerns (please detail) ________________________
- □
- Inconvenient to use
- □
- Concerned food might taste differently
- □
- Don’t want to change from tradition
- □
- Other members of the family don’t want to use it
- □
- No perceived benefit
- □
- Other (please specify) ___________________________
- □
- Install chimney
- □
- Change stove position
- □
- Put in more windows/openings
Cooking area observations: | ||
Stove Type:
| Chimney Present:
| Electricity:
|
Ventilation Mechanism: | Number Observed: | Comments: |
Walls in cooking area | ||
Windows in cooking area | ||
Doors in the cooking area | ||
Walls with an opening to outside the house | ||
Walls with an opening to inside the house | ||
Open eaves | ||
Other |
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Demographic Variables | Study Participants n (%) |
---|---|
Village: | |
Sangwa | 13 (36.1) |
Ingenzi | 3 (8.3) |
Ituze | 7 (19.4) |
Ikaze | 6 (16.7) |
Imanzi | 4 (11.1) |
Umwezi | 2 (5.6) |
Hirwa | 1 (2.8) |
Participant age: (years) | |
18–24 | 4 (11.1) |
25–34 | 20 (55.5) |
35–44 | 10 (27.8) |
45–55 | 2 (5.6) |
Household size: (number of people) | |
<5 | 13 (36.1) |
5–10 | 23 (63.9) |
Main cook: | |
Mother | 34 (94.4) |
Family member | 1 (2.8) |
Housemaid | 1 (2.8) |
Number of children aged <5 years: | |
1 | 25 (69.4) |
2 | 9 (25.0) |
3 | 2 (5.6) |
Households with electricity access | 36 (100.0) |
Households with chimney present | 36 (100.0) |
Cooking Activities | Study Participants n (%) |
---|---|
Type of cookstove used: | |
Single-pot metal charcoal stove (mobile) | 35 (97.2) |
Multi-pot stone stove (fixed) | 1 (2.8) |
Households with multiple single-pot metal charcoal stove | 6 (16.7) |
Biomass fuel used: | |
Charcoal | 34 (94.4) |
Charcoal and wood | 2 (5.6) |
Reason for fuel choice: | |
Cost | 33 (91.6) |
Tradition | 2 (5.6) |
Availability | 1 (2.8) |
Type of additional lighting fuel used: | |
Plastic | 29 (80.6) |
Paper | 4 (11.1) |
Wood | 12 (33.3) |
Other a | 5 (13.9) |
Fuel collection or delivery: | |
Collection by household member | 28 (77.8) |
Delivery | 8 (22.2) |
Number of meals cooked per day: | |
1 | 19 (52.8) |
2 | 13 (36.1) |
3 | 4 (11.1) |
Location of cooking area: | |
Internal room within main house (living or sleeping area) | 4 (11.1) |
Separate building attached to the main house (shared wall) | 7 (19.4) |
Separate building detached from the main house | 2 (5.6) |
Outside | 23 (63.8) |
Approximate time stove in use per day: (hours) | |
>0–2 | 16 (44.5) |
>2–4 | 12 (33.3) |
>4–6 | 4 (11.1) |
>6 | 4 (11.1) |
Approximate time women spend attending stove per day: (hours) | |
>0–2 | 16 (44.5) |
>2–4 | 13 (36.1) |
>4–6 | 4 (11.1) |
>6 | 3 (8.3) |
Approximate time child (<5 years) spent near the stove per day: (hours) | |
0 | 5 (13.9) |
>0–2 | 19 (52.8) |
>2–4 | 8 (22.2) |
>4 | 4 (11.1) |
Response | Study Participants a n (%) |
---|---|
Reported perceived benefits of using gas fuel for cooking | |
Cooks food faster | 20 (55.6) |
Cleaner and improves sanitation | 9 (25.0) |
Enables cooking indoors | 4 (11.1) |
Easier to prevent children being near stove | 2 (5.6) |
Improves the taste of food | 2 (5.6) |
Reduces/no smoke | 16 (44.4) |
Health benefits | 2 (5.6) |
Easier to use and ignite | 9 (25.0) |
Gas is a cheaper fuel | 2 (5.6) |
Other b | 6 (16.7) |
Reported concerns about using gas fuel for cooking | |
Worried about cost | 16 (44.4) |
Safety concerns: risk of fires, explosions, injuries | 9 (25.0) |
Safety concerns: related to children playing with gas | 9 (25.0) |
Inconvenient to use for cooking some foods | 2 (5.6) |
Fuel is consumed too quickly | 2 (5.6) |
Concern about maintenance | 2 (5.6) |
No Concerns | 10 (27.8) |
Maximum monthly cost willing to pay for gas installation? (RWF) | |
0 | 8 (22.2) |
1–1500 | 10 (27.8) |
>1500–3000 | 12 (33.3) |
>3000–4500 | 3 (8.3) |
>4500–6000 | 2 (5.6) |
>6000 | 1 (2.8) |
Common perceptions of traditional charcoal cookstoves: | |
Associated with disease and poor health | 10 (27.8) |
Associated with burns and injuries | 6 (16.7) |
Releases lots of smoke | 6 (16.7) |
Charcoal is very dirty to cook with | 6 (16.7) |
Traditional stove breaks easily | 7 (19.4) |
Charcoal makes food and boiled water taste of smoke | 5 (13.9) |
Charcoal is slow and time consuming to cook with | 3 (8.3) |
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Campbell, C.A.; Bartington, S.E.; Woolley, K.E.; Pope, F.D.; Thomas, G.N.; Singh, A.; Avis, W.R.; Tumwizere, P.R.; Uwanyirigira, C.; Abimana, P.; et al. Investigating Cooking Activity Patterns and Perceptions of Air Quality Interventions among Women in Urban Rwanda. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 5984. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18115984
Campbell CA, Bartington SE, Woolley KE, Pope FD, Thomas GN, Singh A, Avis WR, Tumwizere PR, Uwanyirigira C, Abimana P, et al. Investigating Cooking Activity Patterns and Perceptions of Air Quality Interventions among Women in Urban Rwanda. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(11):5984. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18115984
Chicago/Turabian StyleCampbell, Catherine A., Suzanne E. Bartington, Katherine E. Woolley, Francis D. Pope, Graham Neil Thomas, Ajit Singh, William R. Avis, Patrick R. Tumwizere, Clement Uwanyirigira, Pacifique Abimana, and et al. 2021. "Investigating Cooking Activity Patterns and Perceptions of Air Quality Interventions among Women in Urban Rwanda" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 11: 5984. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18115984
APA StyleCampbell, C. A., Bartington, S. E., Woolley, K. E., Pope, F. D., Thomas, G. N., Singh, A., Avis, W. R., Tumwizere, P. R., Uwanyirigira, C., Abimana, P., & Kabera, T. (2021). Investigating Cooking Activity Patterns and Perceptions of Air Quality Interventions among Women in Urban Rwanda. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(11), 5984. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18115984