IAQ.net Resources

IOM Climate Change, the Indoor Environment and Health - 2011.pdf

Issue link: https://hi.iaq.net/i/191637

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 146 of 286

Climate Change, the Indoor Environment, and Health 132 CLIMATE CHANGE, THE INDOOR ENVIRONMENT, AND HEALTH Weschler CJ, Nazaroff WW. 2010. SVOC partitioning between the gas phase and settled dust indoors. Atmospheric Environment 44:3609-3620. WHO (World Health Organization). 1986. WHO environmental health criteria 59: Principles for evaluating health risks from chemicals during infancy and early childhood: The need for a special approach. Geneva: WHO Press. WHO. 2007. Indoor air pollution and lower respiratory tract infections in children. Geneva: WHO Press. Wilkinson P, Smith KR, Davies M, Adair H, Armstrong BG, Barrett M, Bruce N, Haines A, Hamilton I, Oreszczyn T, Ridley I, Tonne C, Chalabi Z. 2009. Public health benefits of strategies to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions: Household energy. Lancet 374:1917-1929. Wilson KM, Klein JD, Blumkin AK, Gottlieb M, Winickoff JP. 2011. Tobacco-smoke exposure in children who live in multiunit housing. Pediatrics 127(1):85-92. Wilson WE, Suh HH. 1997. Fine particles and coarse particles: Concentration relationships relevant to epidemiologic studies. Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association 47:1238-1249. Wilson WE, Mage DT, Grant LD. 2000. Estimating separately personal exposure to ambient and nonambient particulate matter for epidemiology and risk assessment: Why and how. Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association 50:1167-1183. Winickoff JP, Gottlieb M, Mello MM. 2010. Regulation of smoking in public housing. New England Journal of Medicine 362(24):2319-2325. Wisthaler A, Weschler CJ. 2010. Reactions of ozone with human skin lipids: Sources of carbonyls, dicarbonyls, and hydroxycarbonyls in indoor air. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 107:6568-6575. Wolkoff P. 1995. Volatile organic compounds—Sources, measurements, emissions, and the impact on indoor air quality. Indoor Air 5(Suppl 3):1-73. Wolkoff P, Clausen PA, Jensen B, Nielsen GD, Wilkins CK. 1997. Are we measuring the relevant indoor pollutants? Indoor Air 7:92-106. Woodruff TJ, Axelrad DA, Caldwell J, Morello-Frosch R, Rosenbaum A. 1998. Public health implications of 1990 air toxics concentrations across the United States. Environmental Health Perspectives 106:245-251. Wormuth M, Scheringer M, Vollenweider M, Hungerbühler K. 2006. What are the sources of exposure to eight frequently used phthalic acid esters in Europeans? Risk Analysis 26:803-824. Yeh H-C, Cuddihy RG, Phalen RF, Chang I-Y. 1996. Comparisons of calculated respiratory tract deposition of particles based on the proposed NCRP model and the new ICRP66 model. Aerosol Science and Technology 25:134-140. Ziska LH, Emche SD, Johnson EL, George K, Reed DR, Sicher RC. 2005. Alterations in the production and concentration of selected alkaloids as a function of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide and air temperature: Implications for ethno-pharmacology. Global Change Biology 11:1798-1807. Ziska LH, Epstein PR, Schlesinger WH. 2009. Rising CO2, climate change, and public health: Exploring the links to plant biology. Environmental Health Perspectives 117(2):155-158. Ziska L, Knowlton K, Rogers C, Dalan D, Tierney N, Elder MA, Filley W, Shropshire J, Ford LB, Hedberg C, Fleetwood P, Hovanky KT, Kavanaugh T, Fulford G, Vrtis RF, Patz JA, Portnoy J, Coates F, Bielory L, Frenz D. 2011. Recent warming by latitude associated with increased length of ragweed pollen season in central North America. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 108(10):4248-4251. Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of IAQ.net Resources - IOM Climate Change, the Indoor Environment and Health - 2011.pdf