I'm traveling and don't have access to all my files as a result so I can't give 
you details from when I was actively working on this a few years ago.  There is 
only 1 study that I could find then that modeled the passive particulates in a 
house from a certain number of cigarettes being smoked and a typical amount of 
air exchange.  The levels were actually around the lower part of the range in 
the group in Guatemala that had the rocket stoves installed.  For cigarette 
smoke,  we know that this amount of smoking in a household is associated with 
increased childhood pneumonia.  In the long-run, personal exposure is what 
counts and this is hard to measure for particulates which is why Kirk Smith's 
group used personal CO monitors on children instead.  I think it would be 
useful for someone to mount a large study that paid women to carry a 
particulate sampling system inside a life-size baby doll to get accurate ranges 
for what a typical infant is exposed to.  Ideally this would be done in 
 multiple locations where etiologic research on pneumonia in children is being 
done.  Unfortunately the clinicians doing those large studies did not opt to 
look at smoke exposure levels; that probably goes along with the mindset that 
has been encountered in the past from the Gates Foundation that seems to 
dismiss attempts to lower exposure to combustion products as not as worthy of 
attention as their efforts to diagnose and treat these pneumonias more quickly 
and adequately in order to lower the death rate.

Jay Smith, MD, MPH
________________________________________
From: Ron [[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, June 05, 2013 11:36 AM
To: Discussion of biomass cooking stoves; Paul Anderson
Cc: Kirk R. Smith; Discussion of biomass cooking stoves; Hugh McLaughlin; Jay 
Smith; jetter jim; Dean Still
Subject: Re: [Stoves] Between PM 2.5 and PM 10

Paul, Kirk et al

  Thanks to you both for this exchange.  I only respond to be sure that Paul's 
first question is answered.  I think that Kirk was not saying that.  He maybe 
was referring to a standard for PM 2.5

  The second point below contradicts the first.  I truncate most of the 
exchange except that pertinent to these two items and a third.

   The third is on Kirk's reference to BAP. .  Googling says this is benzo a 
pyrene - a PAH (polyaromatic hydrocarbon) produced both in cigarettes and wood 
stoves - some are carcinogenic and probably/possibly/maybe BAP is one of the 
worst.  I believe these are not now being measured in standard stove testing 
and wonder if they should be.  Since PAHs are associated with higher 
temperatures than typically found in TLUDs, might pyrolyzing stoves show up 
better?

  I add Jim Jetter and Dean Still to get their thoughts as well.  Most likely 
the best work on BAP will have been done by Kirk and his groups, but he may not 
have looked at any pyrolyzing stoves.
This probably is an expensive test.

    See excerpt below.

Ron


On Jun 4, 2013, at 10:31 PM, Paul Anderson 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Dear Kirk,

Your reply (below) is quite useful, and I hope the Stovers on the Listserv will 
read it.   And it leads to further questions:

1. Did I understand correctly?   You say that HALF of a single cigarette per 
day (directly inhaled) is equal to the PM 2.5 inhaled (as "secondary" smoke in 
the kitchen) by a cook or child who is in a typically poorly enclosed "smoky 
kitchen" with a 3-stone fire .   WOW!!

2.  And that a
typical open wood cookfire produces about 400 cigarettes an hour worth of PM2.5
(that I assume can also be inside a poorly enclosed cooking space).   If a 
person takes 12 minutes to smoke one cigarette, that is 5 per hour for one 
person.  So the 3-stone fire creates a smoky environment that is the equivalent 
of 80 persons smoking 5 cigarettes per hour in an enclosed space.   That helps 
explain the smoke billowing out under the eaves and through the door and cracks 
of many "kitchens" with 3-stone fires.   (Did I express that correctly?)

    <long snip then Kirk said. - we need explanation of "the levels">

Not an answerable question since small children do not smoke (who knows how 
much they would breath in if they did).  For an adult, the levels are a about 
half a cigarette or so equivalent in daily dose (PM2.5 inhaled), depending of 
course on how polluted the house is.    In terms of secondhand tobacco smoke, a 
typical open wood cookfire produces about 400 cigarettes an hour worth of 
PM2.5.    More in terms of some other pollutants, for example BAP.

      <snipped rest>

Ron

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