Impact of the Wood-Burning Justa Cookstove on Glycated Hemoglobin (HbA1c): A Stepped-Wedge Randomized Trial in Rural Honduras

  • Bonnie N. Young
  • , Jennifer L. Peel
  • , Sarah Rajkumar
  • , Kayleigh P. Keller
  • , Megan L. Benka-Coker
  • , Nicholas Good
  • , Ethan S. Walker
  • , Robert D. Brook
  • , Tracy L. Nelson
  • , John Volckens
  • , Christian L’orange
  • , Casey Quinn
  • , Sebastian Africano
  • , Anibal B. Osorto Pinel
  • , Maggie L. Clark

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Type 2 diabetes is a rapidly growing global health challenge in low-and middle-income countries (LMICs), and evidence suggests that air pollution exposure contributes. Household air pollution from burning solid fuels for cooking is a major burden in LMICs, but studies demonstrating associations between reductions in household air pollution and improvements in HbA1c, a biomarker of diabetes risk, are lacking. We previously reported substantial reductions in fine particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter ≤2:5 lm (PM2:5 ) and black carbon concentrations following an intervention in rural Honduras with the Justa cookstove, a wood-burning stove with an engineered combustion chamber and chimney. OBJECTIVE: In a stepped-wedge randomized controlled trial among 230 Honduran women using traditional wood-burning stoves at baseline, we evaluated the effect of the Justa intervention on HbA1c and characterized the longitudinal associations between air pollution exposures and HbA1c. METHODS: At each of six visits over 3 y, we measured 24-h PM2:5 and black carbon concentrations, and finger-stick HbA1c levels. We used linear mixed models in intent-to-treat (condition by assigned stove type), exposure–response (using 24-h measures and modeled estimates of long-term exposures), and “per protocol” self-reported stove use analyses. RESULTS: HbA1c was reduced for the Justa condition in comparison with the traditional stove condition, but estimates were small and not statistically significant [−0:03 percentage points, 95% confidence interval (CI): −0:13, 0.07, n = 1,208 observations]. A slightly stronger effect was observed when using self-reported stove use in per protocol analyses. Exposure–response analyses demonstrated positive associations between HbA1c and air pollution [e.g., HbA1c was 0.22 percentage points higher (95% CI: 0.13, 0.30) per log-unit higher long-term average personal PM2:5 ]. DISCUSSION: Our study provides novel evidence of exposure–response associations between household air pollution and HbA1c within a randomized cookstove trial, contributing to the evidence base necessary to support clean cooking policy initiatives. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP15095.

Original languageEnglish
Article number057021
JournalEnvironmental Health Perspectives
Volume133
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 29 2025

Keywords

  • Humans
  • Glycated Hemoglobin/analysis
  • Honduras
  • Female
  • Cooking/instrumentation
  • Particulate Matter/analysis
  • Wood
  • Middle Aged
  • Air Pollution, Indoor/statistics & numerical data
  • Rural Population
  • Adult
  • Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/epidemiology
  • Air Pollutants/analysis

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