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Air–Noise Pollution Linkages: Testing Innovative Community‑Based Adaptation and Mitigation Strategies in Kenya Cover

Air–Noise Pollution Linkages: Testing Innovative Community‑Based Adaptation and Mitigation Strategies in Kenya

Open Access
|Oct 2025

Abstract

Introduction: Our case study was conducted across healthcare facilities in Kilifi and Nairobi, where perinatal adolescents were screened for depression.

Objective: The relationship of environmental monitoring in addressing mental health needs of vulnerable perinatal adolescent populations was explored.

Methods: We installed outdoor air quality sensors at two facilities in Nairobi—Kangemi and Kariobangi North health centers—and two in Kilifi—Mtwapa and Vipingo health centers—and installed sensors in two households of two perinatal adolescents. Community health workers monitored air quality and noise levels data, collecting experiential data on stress and mood from perinatal adolescents.

Findings: Air quality monitoring revealed site‑specific variations in PM2.5 concentrations. Kariobangi Health Center recorded the highest mean concentration of 29.45 µg/m³, exceeding the WHO 2021 annual guideline of 5 µg/m³ indicating substantially degraded air quality. Kangemi Health Center was next (21.27 µg/m³), followed by Mtwapa (15.34 µg/m³) and Vipingo (12.52 µg/m³). Noise monitoring revealed consistently elevated exposure in healthcare settings. At Kangemi Health Center, mean noise levels reached 52.2 dB (median: 53.5 dB), surpassing the WHO guideline for hospital settings (<35–40 dB). Household‑level air quality monitoring highlighted significant operational challenges: sensor deployment constraints, difficulties in ensuring continuous temporal coverage, and substantial intra‑day variability—underscoring the need for improved monitoring design and calibration strategies.

Conclusions: We tested air and noise monitoring deployment as a lever for strengthening the health system and a strategy for improved patient care and mental well‑being. We trained community health workers and youth leaders in a task‑shifting model to collect environmental health data. Our approach sought to ease the deployment of environmental monitoring in a sustainable data collection process. However, both mitigation, targeting reduction in sources of pollution, and adaptation efforts focused on coping with the effects of air and noise pollution on vulnerable populations within primary care need concerted efforts.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/aogh.4750 | Journal eISSN: 2214-9996
Language: English
Submitted on: Mar 26, 2025
Accepted on: Oct 5, 2025
Published on: Oct 28, 2025
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2025 Manasi Kumar, Ngongang Wandji Danube, Vincent Nyongesa, Lucas Kalama, Carol Ngunu, Hassan Leli, Albert Tele, Edith Apondi, Josphat Asande, Osman Warfa, Ayub Macharia, Beatrice Madeghe, Obadia Yator, Darius Nyamai, Philip Osano, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.