Bangkok Post

Asthma study sparks debate

Concerns resurface about the safety of cooking with gas stoves in the kitchen, writes Daniel Lawler

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New research that links cooking with natural gas to around 12% of childhood asthma cases has sparked debate about the health risks of kitchen stoves, as well as calls in the United States for stepped-up regulation.

The authors of the study said their findings suggested that around 650,000 US children would not have developed asthma if their homes had electric or induction stovetops, comparing the impact on health to that of secondhand smoke.

But an expert who was involved in the study questioned its findings and cautioned that gas remains far healthier than cooking with wood, charcoal and coal, which are estimated to cause 3.2 million deaths a year from household air pollution, overwhelmi­ngly in developing countries.

The peer-reviewed US study was published last month in the Internatio­nal Journal of Environmen­tal Research and Public Health.

It is based on a calculatio­n of the risk of developing asthma in homes with a gas stove from a 2013 review of 41 previous studies.

Combining that calculatio­n with US census data, it linked 12.7% of US childhood asthma cases to gas cooking.

The same calculatio­n was previously used in 2018 research that attributed 12.3% of childhood asthma cases in Australia to gas stoves.

A report released on Monday used the same calculatio­n to link 12% of childhood asthma to gas cooking in the European Union.

The report, which has not been peerreview­ed, was released by the energy efficiency group CLASP and the European Public Health Alliance.

The European report included computer simulation­s conducted by the Netherland­s’ research organisati­on TNO analysing exposure to air pollution in different European household kitchens.

The level of nitrogen dioxide was found to exceed EU and World Health Organizati­on guidelines several times a week in all scenarios except for a large kitchen with a range hood that vented outside the home.

Nitrogen dioxide, which is emitted when gas is burned, is “a pollutant closely linked to asthma and other respirator­y conditions,” according to the WHO.

This year, CLASP will collect air quality measuremen­ts from 280 kitchens across Europe in a bid to confirm the results.

The research comes amid heightened scrutiny of gas stoves in the United States.

Richard Trumka Jr, a commission­er at the Consumer Product Safety Commission, tweeted on Monday that the agency “will consider all approaches to regulation”.

“To be clear, CPSC isn’t coming for anyone’s gas stoves. Regulation­s apply to new products,” he later added.

The American Gas Associatio­n, a lobby group, denounced the US study as an “advocacy-based mathematic­al exercise that doesn’t add any new science”.

Brady Seals, a manager at the Rocky Mountain Institute and coauthor of the study, rebuffed the lobby group’s statement.

“Of course it’s just math,” she told AFP. “But it gives us a number that we never had before.”

Rob Jackson of Stanford University, who has previously published research showing that climate-warming methane can leak from gas stoves even when they are switched off, said the US paper was “supported by dozens of other studies concluding that breathing indoor pollution from gas can trigger asthma”.

But researcher­s working to transition the three billion people still cooking with harmful solid fuels such as wood, coal and charcoal to cleaner sources expressed concern.

Daniel Pope, a professor of global public health at the UK’s University of Liverpool, said that the link between asthma and pollution from gas stoves had yet to be definitive­ly proven and that further research was needed.

Mr Pope is part of a team conducting research commission­ed by the WHO to summarise the effects different kinds of fuel for cooking and heating can have on health.

Mr Pope told AFP that the results, which will be published later this year, indicate a “substantia­l reduction in risk” when people switched to gas from solid fuels and kerosene.

They found “negligible effects of using gas compared to electricit­y for all health outcomes — including asthma,” he added.

Ms Seals responded by saying that the study did not assume a causal relationsh­ip between asthma and gas cooking, but instead reported the associatio­n between exposure and the disease using studies dating back to the 1970s.

“I think it’s a real problem that the internatio­nal community is not explicitly recognisin­g the very well known, very researched risk of gas stoves,” Ms Seals said.

‘‘ It’s a real problem that the internatio­nal community is not explicitly recognisin­g the very well known, very researched risk of gas stoves. BRADY SEALS CO-AUTHOR OF STUDY

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