In the European research project OFFICAIR, a procedure was developed to determine associations between characteristics of European offices and health and comfort of office workers, through a checklist and a self-administered questionnaire including environmental, physiological, psychological, and social aspects. This procedure was applied in 167 office buildings in eight European countries (Portugal, Spain, Italy, Greece, France, Hungary, the Netherlands, and Finland) during the winter of 2011-2012. About 26 735 survey invitation e-mails were sent, and 7441 office workers were included in the survey. Among respondents who rated an overall comfort less than 4 (23%), 'noise (other than from building systems)', air 'too dry', and temperature 'too variable' were the main complaints selected. An increase of perceived control over indoor climate was positively associated with the perceived indoor environment quality. Almost one-third of office workers suffered from dry eyes and headache in the last 4 weeks. Physical building characteristics were associated with occupants' overall satisfaction (acoustical solutions, mold growth, complaints procedure, cleaning activities) and health (number of occupants, lack of operable windows, presence of carpet and cleaning activities). OFFICAIR project provides a useful database to identify stressors related to indoor environmental quality and office worker's health.

Self-reported health and comfort in 'modern' office buildings : first results from the European OFFICAIR study / P.M. Bluyssen, C. Roda, C. Mandin, S. Fossati, P. Carrer, Y. de Kluizenaar, V.G. Mihucz, E. de Oliveira Fernandes, J. Bartzis. - In: INDOOR AIR. - ISSN 0905-6947. - 26:2(2016 Apr), pp. 298-317.

Self-reported health and comfort in 'modern' office buildings : first results from the European OFFICAIR study

S. Fossati;P. Carrer;
2016

Abstract

In the European research project OFFICAIR, a procedure was developed to determine associations between characteristics of European offices and health and comfort of office workers, through a checklist and a self-administered questionnaire including environmental, physiological, psychological, and social aspects. This procedure was applied in 167 office buildings in eight European countries (Portugal, Spain, Italy, Greece, France, Hungary, the Netherlands, and Finland) during the winter of 2011-2012. About 26 735 survey invitation e-mails were sent, and 7441 office workers were included in the survey. Among respondents who rated an overall comfort less than 4 (23%), 'noise (other than from building systems)', air 'too dry', and temperature 'too variable' were the main complaints selected. An increase of perceived control over indoor climate was positively associated with the perceived indoor environment quality. Almost one-third of office workers suffered from dry eyes and headache in the last 4 weeks. Physical building characteristics were associated with occupants' overall satisfaction (acoustical solutions, mold growth, complaints procedure, cleaning activities) and health (number of occupants, lack of operable windows, presence of carpet and cleaning activities). OFFICAIR project provides a useful database to identify stressors related to indoor environmental quality and office worker's health.
English
Building Symptom Index; Comfort; Health symptoms; Indoor environment; Office buildings; Europe; Humans; Self Report; Temperature; Health Status; Job Satisfaction; Workplace
Settore MED/44 - Medicina del Lavoro
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca di base
Pubblicazione scientifica
   On the reduction of health effects frm combned exposure to indoor air pollutants in modern offices
   OFFICAIR
   EUROPEAN COMMISSION
   FP7
   265267
apr-2016
26
2
298
317
20
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
pubmed
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Self-reported health and comfort in 'modern' office buildings : first results from the European OFFICAIR study / P.M. Bluyssen, C. Roda, C. Mandin, S. Fossati, P. Carrer, Y. de Kluizenaar, V.G. Mihucz, E. de Oliveira Fernandes, J. Bartzis. - In: INDOOR AIR. - ISSN 0905-6947. - 26:2(2016 Apr), pp. 298-317.
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Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
9
262
Article (author)
si
P.M. Bluyssen, C. Roda, C. Mandin, S. Fossati, P. Carrer, Y. de Kluizenaar, V.G. Mihucz, E. de Oliveira Fernandes, J. Bartzis
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/499319
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