A study protocol to assess the respiratory health risks and impacts amongst informal street food vendors in the inner City of Johannesburg, South Africa

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Authors

Sepadi, Maasago Mercy
Nkosi, Vusumuzi

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Publisher

MDPI Publishing

Abstract

The overall unemployment rate in South Africa was impacted by the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, which led many people to resort to informal work such as street trading opportunities in big cities. However, this work is located in the same cities where air pollution is of concern. Furthermore, literature has indicated the lack of regulation of the informal trading sector as compared to the formal sector. An analytical cross-sectional study is proposed to be conducted amongst all of the informal food street vendors (indoor/inside buildings and outdoor/street pavements stalls) in the inner city of Johannesburg, South Africa. By adopting a total sampling method of 746 vendor stalls, this study’s key focus is on inhalation as an occupational exposure. In addition, the study aims to assess the respiratory risk factors amongst informal food street vendors’ stalls and their impact on vendors’ respiratory health. The risk factors to be assessed include the five common air pollutants: street vendor’s infrastructure; socioeconomic factors; personal behavior such as tobacco smoking and handwashing practices; wearing of respiratory protective equipment; and vendors’ exposure duration. The data collection will follow three phases using quantitative methods. In the pre-assessment phase, it will include a pilot study to test the walkthrough survey checklist and the respiratory symptoms and diseases questionnaire. The assessment phase includes a total of eight area samples, which will be taken in a 1-day event over four yearly seasons, as well as thirty personal samples taken in winter over an 8-h work shift. The post-assessment phase will be the development of a risk impact assessment and a risk management model. The study is essential for healthy occupational conditions as indicated in the Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) Act (no. 85 of 1993) and the Regulations governing general hygiene requirements for food premises, the transport of food, and related matters (no. R638 of 22 June 2018).

Description

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL : Table S1: Draft observational walkthrough survey checklist; Table S2: Draft respiratory symptoms and diseases interview; Table S3: Air pollution sampling information sheet.

Keywords

Johannesburg, Respiratory symptoms and diseases, Risk assessment, Informal, Street vendors, Occupational health, Environmental health, South Africa (SA), COVID-19 pandemic, Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)

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Citation

Sepadi, M.M.; Nkosi, V. A Study Protocol to Assess the Respiratory Health Risks and Impacts amongst Informal Street Food Vendors in the Inner City of Johannesburg, South Africa. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2021, 18, 11320. https://DOI.org/10.3390/ijerph182111320.