The relationship between occupant behaviour and indoor air quality in Malaysian hospital outpatient departments: A multistage cross-sectional study

Introduction: Poor indoor air quality (IAQ) in healthcare settings may adversely impact occupants ' well-being and promote transmission of infectious respiratory disease. However, evidence on its potentially modifiable determinants, including occupant behaviour, remains scarce. This study aims...

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Published in:HELIYON
Main Authors: Ibrahim, Farha; Samsudin, Ely Zarina; Ishak, Ahmad Razali; Sathasivam, Jeyanthini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: CELL PRESS 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001271516900001
author Ibrahim
Farha; Samsudin
Ely Zarina; Ishak
Ahmad Razali; Sathasivam
Jeyanthini
spellingShingle Ibrahim
Farha; Samsudin
Ely Zarina; Ishak
Ahmad Razali; Sathasivam
Jeyanthini
The relationship between occupant behaviour and indoor air quality in Malaysian hospital outpatient departments: A multistage cross-sectional study
Science & Technology - Other Topics
author_facet Ibrahim
Farha; Samsudin
Ely Zarina; Ishak
Ahmad Razali; Sathasivam
Jeyanthini
author_sort Ibrahim
spelling Ibrahim, Farha; Samsudin, Ely Zarina; Ishak, Ahmad Razali; Sathasivam, Jeyanthini
The relationship between occupant behaviour and indoor air quality in Malaysian hospital outpatient departments: A multistage cross-sectional study
HELIYON
English
Article
Introduction: Poor indoor air quality (IAQ) in healthcare settings may adversely impact occupants ' well-being and promote transmission of infectious respiratory disease. However, evidence on its potentially modifiable determinants, including occupant behaviour, remains scarce. This study aims to determine the relationship between occupant behaviour and IAQ in Malaysian hospital outpatient departments (OPDs). Methods: A multistage cross-sectional study of six randomly selected Malaysian public hospital OPDs was conducted. In stage one, IAQ parameters, including temperature, relative humidity (RH), air velocity (AV), carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), total bacterial count (TBC), and total fungal count (TFC) were measured. In stage two, an observation form based on the Korsavi and Montazami tool for measuring adaptive behaviour was used to examine occupant density, activities, and operation of building envelopes and appliances. Simple correlation, partial correlation, and linear regression analyses were performed to examine the relationship between occupant behaviour and IAQ parameters. Results: The IAQ of selected hospital OPDs complied with established standards, except for temperature and AV. Occupant density was positively correlated with temperature and CO 2 . Meanwhile, occupants ' activities including slow walking and brisk walking were positively correlated with temperature, AV, CO 2 , TBC and TFC. Conversely, occupants ' opening of windows and doors were positively correlated with temperature and AV but negatively correlated with CO 2 , TBC and TFC. Finally, turning on fans was positively correlated with AV but negatively correlated with TBC, whereas turning on air conditioner was positively correlated with CO 2 . Among occupants ' behaviour, opening of windows and doors contributed the most to variation in IAQ parameters. Conclusions: The study findings suggest that IAQ in hospital OPDs are influenced by occupant density, activities, and operation of doors, windows, and appliances. Prospective hospital IAQ guidelines should incorporate policies and measures targeting these factors to ensure occupants ' best practices in maintaining healthy hospital indoor air environments.
CELL PRESS

2405-8440
2024
10
14
10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e34454
Science & Technology - Other Topics
gold
WOS:001271516900001
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001271516900001
title The relationship between occupant behaviour and indoor air quality in Malaysian hospital outpatient departments: A multistage cross-sectional study
title_short The relationship between occupant behaviour and indoor air quality in Malaysian hospital outpatient departments: A multistage cross-sectional study
title_full The relationship between occupant behaviour and indoor air quality in Malaysian hospital outpatient departments: A multistage cross-sectional study
title_fullStr The relationship between occupant behaviour and indoor air quality in Malaysian hospital outpatient departments: A multistage cross-sectional study
title_full_unstemmed The relationship between occupant behaviour and indoor air quality in Malaysian hospital outpatient departments: A multistage cross-sectional study
title_sort The relationship between occupant behaviour and indoor air quality in Malaysian hospital outpatient departments: A multistage cross-sectional study
container_title HELIYON
language English
format Article
description Introduction: Poor indoor air quality (IAQ) in healthcare settings may adversely impact occupants ' well-being and promote transmission of infectious respiratory disease. However, evidence on its potentially modifiable determinants, including occupant behaviour, remains scarce. This study aims to determine the relationship between occupant behaviour and IAQ in Malaysian hospital outpatient departments (OPDs). Methods: A multistage cross-sectional study of six randomly selected Malaysian public hospital OPDs was conducted. In stage one, IAQ parameters, including temperature, relative humidity (RH), air velocity (AV), carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), total bacterial count (TBC), and total fungal count (TFC) were measured. In stage two, an observation form based on the Korsavi and Montazami tool for measuring adaptive behaviour was used to examine occupant density, activities, and operation of building envelopes and appliances. Simple correlation, partial correlation, and linear regression analyses were performed to examine the relationship between occupant behaviour and IAQ parameters. Results: The IAQ of selected hospital OPDs complied with established standards, except for temperature and AV. Occupant density was positively correlated with temperature and CO 2 . Meanwhile, occupants ' activities including slow walking and brisk walking were positively correlated with temperature, AV, CO 2 , TBC and TFC. Conversely, occupants ' opening of windows and doors were positively correlated with temperature and AV but negatively correlated with CO 2 , TBC and TFC. Finally, turning on fans was positively correlated with AV but negatively correlated with TBC, whereas turning on air conditioner was positively correlated with CO 2 . Among occupants ' behaviour, opening of windows and doors contributed the most to variation in IAQ parameters. Conclusions: The study findings suggest that IAQ in hospital OPDs are influenced by occupant density, activities, and operation of doors, windows, and appliances. Prospective hospital IAQ guidelines should incorporate policies and measures targeting these factors to ensure occupants ' best practices in maintaining healthy hospital indoor air environments.
publisher CELL PRESS
issn
2405-8440
publishDate 2024
container_volume 10
container_issue 14
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e34454
topic Science & Technology - Other Topics
topic_facet Science & Technology - Other Topics
accesstype gold
id WOS:001271516900001
url https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001271516900001
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