DPHS COVID-19 Impact Report_06_03_21

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QUALITY OF INDOOR AIR PLUMMETED IN SOME HOMES DURING COVID-19 SHUTDOWN Written by Robert C. Jones Jr. Published on July 14, 2020 Category: Faculty, Research, Service Environmental sensors placed in Miami- and Baltimore-area homes by University of Miami public health researcher Naresh Kumar recorded elevated levels of particulate matter, carbon monoxide, and other harmful substances during a two-month, stay-at-home period. Daily commutes to and from the office grounded to a halt. Restaurants closed their dining rooms, operating as takeout establishments, only. Gyms, barbershops, and nail salons shuttered. And people, except for trips to the grocery store or pharmacy, pretty much stayed at home. When the nation’s governors imposed shelter-in-place orders in their states earlier this year in hopes of reining in surging cases of COVID-19, Naresh Kumar, a University of Miami public health scientist who studies the environmental burden of disease, knew that the special sensors he had placed in more than 30 residential homes in

Miami and the city of Baltimore would eventually have a story to tell. Now, as most states have started to lift restrictions and reopen their economies, those sensors are telling that story. During a two-month period from April through May, when residents spent the majority of their time indoors complying with COVID-19 lockdown orders, levels of harmful substances in those homes increased dramatically, degrading the quality of indoor air. And shutdown directives imposed to curtail the coronavirus were the cause of those spikes, said Kumar, an associate professor of environmental health at the Miller School of Medicine. While his findings are still preliminary, the numbers he has downloaded from his environmental sensors are nonetheless startling. Amounts of fine particulate pollution, which is also known as PM2.5 because the particles are less than 2.5 micrometers in diameter, rose by 30 percent over that twomonth span. Meanwhile, concentrations of ammonia, carbon monoxide,

and nitrogen dioxide climbed by 2.7 percent, 15 percent, and 4 percent, respectively. “But it’s what people did inside their residences during stay-athome orders that contributed to those increases,” Kumar said. With restaurants offering only takeout, more people cooked meals at home, some using gas-powered ranges that produced carbon monoxide and which didn’t have effective exhaust hoods. And as concerns over the spread of COVID-19 grew, people took disinfecting to a new level, often overusing harsh cleaning products and exposing themselves to dangerous compounds like ammonium chloride, Kumar noted. From January to March, poison control centers reported a 20 percent increase in calls compared to the same period last year, according to the Centers for Disease Control Prevention, which used data from the National Poison Data System. While National Ambient Air Quality Standards imposed by the EPA have helped mitigate outdoor air pollution,

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» New Grant Targets Global Health Protection Against the Spread of Infectious Diseases

3min
pages 100-102

» Experts Develop New Tool to Help Contain COVID-19 in Latin America

5min
pages 96-97

» A New Survey Sheds Light on ‘Vulnerable’ Cannabis Users

3min
pages 94-95

» Frenk: Latin America, Caribbean Can Learn From Other Covid-19 Responses

4min
pages 98-99

» COVID-19 Lessons From Peru and Argentina

6min
pages 82-83

» COVID-19 Observatory: Bungled Response Compounds Misery in Brazil

5min
pages 92-93

sory Meeting

4min
pages 90-91

» Why Brazil Is Now the Epicenter of the Coronavirus Pandemic » Experts Discuss a Potential Global Public Health Convention in University of Miami-Led Advi-

3min
page 89

» Violence Against Women, Children Escalates During Pandemic

3min
page 84

» Orthopaedic Trauma Units Across the Globe Greatly Impacted by COVID-19, Study Finds

6min
pages 87-88

» Scientific Evidence And Global Collaboration Can Help End The Pandemic

2min
page 85

» COVID-19 is Ravaging Latin America

3min
page 86

Makers

2min
page 70

» Julio Frenk: Empowered Who Needed to Battle Pandemics

2min
page 81

» Panel: Pandemic Intensified Need for Palliative Care in Latin America

4min
pages 78-79

» Caribbean Nations Explore New Ideas, Directions to Recover From Pandemic

2min
page 80

» Report Confirms Pandemic-Related Spikes in Domestic Violence

2min
page 71

inx Sexual Minority Men

4min
pages 76-77

» Cancer Patients in Mexico Face Dire Scenario in Wake of COVID-19

5min
pages 72-73

» Miller School Professors Develop Model to Correct COVID-19 Sampling Bias » New Study First to Use Pandemic Stress Index to Document the Effects of COVID-19 on Lat-

4min
pages 74-75

» Public Health Leaders Discuss Steps Needed to Empower Women » Dr. Felicia Knaul: Access to Pain Relief Medicines in Mexico Should Be a Priority for Policy

5min
pages 68-69

» New Panel to Advocate for a Global Public Health Convention for the 21st Century

6min
pages 66-67

» Personal Perspectives on the Covid-19 Crisis in India

7min
pages 64-65

» New Miller School-Led Lancet Study on Redefining the Future of Pandemics

2min
page 63

» Additional Student and Alumni National Impact

3min
pages 60-61

» Strategies to Help the Hard of Hearing During COVID-19 Precautions

3min
pages 56-58

Study Finds

6min
pages 54-55

» Methamphetamine Use and HIV Create Perfect Storm for COVID-19 Transmission

3min
page 59

» Quality of Indoor Air Plummeted in Some Homes During COVID-19 Shutdown » Syringe Service Programs Across the U.S. Have Been Impacted by the COVID-19 Pandemic,

2min
page 53

work

2min
page 52

current Threats

4min
pages 50-51

And HIV

3min
page 49

cine Considerations Project

6min
pages 42-43

During COVID-19

3min
pages 44-45

» Miller School Public Health Researchers Study COVID-19 Antibodies in First Responders » Dr. Adam Carrico Receives NIH Grant to Study Risk for COVID-19 Amid Methamphetamine Use

2min
pages 47-48

Area, Study Finds

3min
pages 40-41

COVID-19

2min
page 46

Cells

6min
pages 38-39

» Study Finds U.S. First Responders Have Mixed Feelings About COVID-19 Vaccine

2min
page 37

» COVID-19 Has Led to the Reformation and Reinvigoration of the Public Health Workforce

2min
page 36

» Sylvester Researchers to Collaborate with Miami-Dade County on Coronavirus Testing

2min
page 27

» Mindfulness During Uncertain Times

1min
page 28

» U-TRACE Initiative to Address COVID-19 Public Health Crisis

2min
page 26

and Frontline Workers

2min
page 35

» Additional Student And Alumni Local Impact

8min
pages 29-33

» A Pandemic Strikes, and an Academic Community Responds

9min
pages 23-25

» Student Garners Reflections on the Importance of Public Health

2min
page 22

» Course Explores Global Health and Disparities During the Pandemic

4min
pages 20-21

» COVID-19 Vaccine Trials Exhibit Early Success

8min
pages 17-19

» Mobile Clinic Takes Vaccines to Underserved Aeas

5min
pages 12-13

munities

2min
page 15

Future

3min
page 11

MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR

3min
pages 6-7

» Battles Being Waged to Overcome Vaccine Hesitancy

6min
pages 9-10

» UHealth Pediatric Mobile Teams Surpass 10,000 COVID-19 Tests

2min
page 16
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