Associations between in-home environmental exposures and lung function in a safety net population of children with asthma using electronic health records and geospatial data

2025  Journal Article

Associations between in-home environmental exposures and lung function in a safety net population of children with asthma using electronic health records and geospatial data

Pub TLDR

How do in-home environmental exposures, like cockroaches and rodents, affect lung function in children with asthma?

 

College of Health researcher(s)

OSU Profile

Highlights

  • Predicted address-level indoor exposures can be linked to electronic health records.
  • Cockroach and rodent probabilities were linked with lower lung function in children with asthma.
  • Creative, scalable methods are needed to reduce population health disparities.

Abstract

Purpose

The effects of in-home environmental exposures (IHEEs) on asthma are challenging to examine in populations because information on asthma triggers is usually absent. We leveraged data from electronic health records (EHRs) to investigate the associations of residential cockroach and rodent exposures with lung function among children with asthma.

Methods

We merged clinical pulmonary function test data from EHRs for children with asthma from a large safety net hospital in the Northeast United States with publicly available geospatial data matched to patient addresses. Predicted presence of key IHEE asthma triggers, cockroaches and rodents, were included as main exposures and housing parcel features and census tract characteristics were included as potential confounders in a sensitivity analysis. We fit latent Bayesian hierarchical models of percent predicted forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1%).

Results

The study population of 1070 children had a mean age of 10.2 years and 75 % identified as Black, many living in historically segregated neighborhoods. In models adjusted for individual characteristics, we observed 2.26 (95 % credible interval, 95 %CrI: − 3.72, − 0.79) and 2.58 (95 %CrI: − 4.54, − 0.66) percentage points (pp) lower FEV1% from a one-unit increase in the log-odds of the probability of cockroach and rodent presence, respectively. The association with lung function increased in magnitude for cockroach exposure but attenuated for rodent exposure in sensitivity analyses.

Conclusions

IHEEs were associated with worse lung function among children with asthma in a safety net population. The observed associations underscore how injustices in housing and neighborhood characteristics contribute to asthma morbidity.

Bozigar, M., Connolly, C.L., Vermeer, K., Carvalho, L., Cohen, R.T., Dugas, J.N., Levy, J.I., Fabian, M.P. (2025) Associations between in-home environmental exposures and lung function in a safety net population of children with asthma using electronic health records and geospatial dataAnnals of Epidemiology105