Chapter 2

Indoor Air Quality and Human Health

Indoor Air Quality and Human Health
Written by Brett Stinson on January 19, 2026

Indoor air quality (IAQ) refers to the chemical, physical, and biological composition of the air inside buildings. Because people spend most of their time indoors—an average of 87% according to national activity surveys—indoor environments dominate human exposure. Residential spaces are particularly important, accounting for roughly two-thirds of daily time.

As a result, the air inside homes, schools, and workplaces exerts a greater influence on lifetime exposure than the outdoor environment, even though outdoor air often receives more regulatory attention.

2.1 — Respiratory Health

Indoor air quality (IAQ) is a central determinant of respiratory health. The lungs are in continuous contact with the air we breathe, and when that air carries pollutants, they penetrate deeply into the respiratory system and circulate throughout the body. Decades of research consistently link degraded IAQ with both acute symptoms and chronic disease, emphasizing the lungs as one of the first and most affected organ systems.

Short-term exposure to indoor pollutants produces a wide range of immediate effects, from coughing, wheezing, and throat irritation to episodes of bronchitis. Pollutant spikes from cooking, heating, cleaning, or outdoor smoke infiltration can trigger discomfort within hours and consistently drive asthma exacerbations, leading to greater dependence on rescue medication. Such exposures may also temporarily impair lung function, increasing airway reactivity, lowering peak flow, and raising the risk of acute respiratory infection.

Long-term exposure to indoor pollution compounds respiratory risks. PM, NO2, and other combustion products (including tobacco smoke) have been linked to chronic bronchitis, asthma progression, and the development of COPD. Repeated exposure also contributes to airway inflammation and remodeling, which can accelerate the decline of lung function over time. Mechanistic studies further demonstrate that indoor pollutants impair host defenses, leaving the respiratory tract more vulnerable to persistent infection and chronic disease.

Susceptibility varies across the lifespan. Children are especially vulnerable due to higher breathing rates relative to their body size, developing lungs, and the large proportion of time they spend indoors. These exposures increase the risk of asthma onset, acute lower respiratory infections, and impaired lung growth. Adults accumulate risks from long-term exposures in homes and workplaces, with combustion byproducts such as secondhand smoke and poor housing conditions contributing to asthma progression and chronic respiratory illness. Older adults face compounded risks due to pre-existing disease, reduced pulmonary capacity, and weaker immune defenses. In nursing homes and long-term care settings, poor ventilation and pollutant buildup have been linked to more frequent infections and accelerated declines in lung function.

Evidence across studies shows that degraded IAQ compromises respiratory health, producing short-term symptoms and driving long-term disease. Because these effects are so consistent and consequential, respiratory outcomes remain one of the strongest reasons for treating indoor air as a central public health priority.

 

2.2 — Air Quality and Heart Health What the Research Shows

IAQ is increasingly recognized as a determinant of cardiovascular health. The cardiovascular system is highly responsive to the air we breathe, with pollutants capable of disrupting vascular function, altering autonomic control, and promoting systemic inflammation. Decades of research link poor IAQ to both short-term physiological changes and the progression of chronic disease, adding to the global burden of morbidity and mortality. As with respiratory outcomes, risks are greatest for older adults and other vulnerable groups.

Acute exposure to indoor pollutants produces measurable cardiovascular responses. Increases in PM2.5, BC, and VOCs have been associated with higher blood pressure, faster heart rate, and reduced heart rate variability. These reactions reflect disruption of vascular function and autonomic regulation, placing added strain on the heart and vasculature. Effects are most evident in seniors and in people with pre-existing conditions such as COPD, where pollutant spikes can trigger physiological stress and heightened risk of arrhythmia.

Long-term exposure to indoor pollutants compounds cardiovascular risk. Combustion byproducts, solid fuels, and tobacco smoke have been associated with higher cardiovascular mortality, while cleaner household fuels are linked to lower risk. Persistent exposure to PM2.5 and VOCs contributes to systemic inflammation, oxidative stress, coagulation changes, and impaired autonomic function, creating pathways for disease progression. Over time, these processes accelerate vascular damage, including arterial stiffness, elevated vascular resistance, and right heart strain. In older adults, chronic exposure consistently increases risk of myocardial infarction, stroke, arrhythmia, hypertension, hospital admissions, and premature death.

Research links degraded IAQ to measurable cardiovascular effects and long-term health impacts. Because these associations span pollutants, populations, and indoor environments, cardiovascular outcomes highlight the broad and lasting impact of indoor air on public health.

 

2.3 — Air Quality and Cancer Risk

Poor indoor air quality contributes to cancer risk. Because many indoor pollutants are known carcinogens, reducing chronic exposure is central to lowering disease burden and protecting long-term health.

IAQ is a fundamental determinant of cancer development. Many pollutants found indoors are carcinogens, and chronic exposure creates pathways for malignant disease. Unlike the acute symptoms seen in other organ systems, the burden develops slowly over time, reflecting the cumulative impact of prolonged pollutant contact. Research shows that effects are concentrated in the lungs, where airborne contaminants have the most direct interaction, though other organs can also be affected.

Several major indoor pollutants are established human carcinogens. Reviews consistently identify radon, secondhand tobacco smoke, and asbestos as the primary contributors, with radon and tobacco smoke together responsible for a substantial share of lung cancers, and asbestos long recognized as a cause of mesothelioma and lung cancer. Formaldehyde is also a confirmed indoor carcinogen, with nasal cancer risk observed at higher exposures; updated evaluations indicate that the World Health Organization indoor air guideline of 0.08 ppm is protective. Combustion byproducts such as benzene and other VOCs also contribute to indoor cancer risk.

A growing body of epidemiological evidence highlights how household conditions and combustion sources shape lung cancer occurrence. Poor ventilation and lack of a separate kitchen consistently heighten susceptibility, while better household airflow appears protective. Among non-smoking women, exposures from solid fuels and high-temperature cooking are especially consequential, with elevated PM2.5 concentrations strongly associated with lung cancer. Traditional wood combustion adds to this burden, with open fireplaces in particular producing large increases in particle concentrations, along with elevated levels of PAHs and hexavalent chromium. Biological evidence further strengthens these associations: cooking and incense burning have been shown to deposit harmful compounds such as naphthalene and o-xylene in lung fluid. Evidence for other cancers is more limited, though breast cancer has been reported with long-term use of synthetic logs in homes.

Research demonstrates that degraded IAQ contributes to cancer formation through prolonged exposure to indoor carcinogens. Because these effects accumulate slowly and span many pollutant sources and environments, cancer outcomes underscore the importance of clean indoor air as a foundation for disease prevention and public health.

 

2.4 — Air Quality and the Nervous System

IAQ is a critical determinant of neurological health. The brain and central nervous system are especially vulnerable to pollutants, which can cross biological barriers, reach neural tissues, and disrupt essential processes. Research shows that poor IAQ is linked not only to subtle cognitive changes, but also to psychiatric disorders, developmental vulnerabilities in early life, and ultimately neurodegenerative disease. As with other organ systems, the risks are greatest for vulnerable groups such as children, the elderly, and those with pre-existing conditions.

Cognitive function responds quickly to changes in IAQ, making it one of the most immediate indicators of pollution’s impact on the brain. In older adults, elevated CO2 and PM2.5 have been associated with smaller hippocampal and amygdala volumes, pointing to alterations in brain regions essential for memory and learning. Beyond structure, indoor PM2.5 can interfere with neural signaling and sensory processing, impairing decision making and increasing the likelihood of cognitive errors. These effects are also evident in learning environments: classrooms with high CO2 and particulate levels show diminished mental capacity and lower standardized test performance, emphasizing how even moderate pollution can hinder day-to-day thinking and academic outcomes.

Neurodevelopment is especially vulnerable to air pollution. Exposures beginning in pregnancy and continuing through childhood have been linked to changes in brain structure, lower developmental scores, and higher risks of attention-deficit and autism spectrum disorders, likely driven by mechanisms such as oxidative stress, inflammation, and endocrine disruption. Traffic-related air pollution can impair brain maturation and neurobehavioral development through systemic inflammation and the direct movement of ultrafine particles into the brain. These early-life disruptions have also been connected to structural brain changes and greater risks of neuroinflammation and neurodegenerative disease in adulthood. Even common indoor exposures matter: infants from households using gas for cooking during pregnancy were shown to have lower developmental scores, particularly when ventilation was inadequate.

Mental health is increasingly recognized as a key area affected by poor air quality. Both indoor and outdoor exposures are associated with higher risks of psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, and bipolar disorder, with the greatest burdens falling on vulnerable groups including children, adolescents, and those with underlying conditions. VOCs and PM2.5 can disrupt neural circuits through oxidative stress and inflammation, biological pathways that directly contribute to mood disorders and psychiatric instability. Consistent with these mechanisms, long-term exposure to traffic-related air pollution has been tied to elevated odds of common mental disorders and even psychotic experiences.

Neurodegenerative disease is another major risk. Chronic exposure to air pollution has been associated with dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and multiple sclerosis, with evidence pointing to structural brain changes and sustained neuroinflammation. Mechanistic research highlights oxidative stress, microglial activation, and blood–brain barrier disruption, along with protein misfolding and aggregation, as pathways that accelerate the progression of these disorders.

Studies consistently demonstrate that degraded IAQ affects the brain across multiple domains, from cognition and development to mental and neurological disease. Because these impacts influence learning, behavior, and well-being across populations, neurological outcomes affirm clean indoor air as a cornerstone of public health.

 

2.5 — Air Quality and Pregnancy

Indoor air pollution threatens the health of both mother and child. Because it influences pregnancy outcomes, fetal growth, and early development, maintaining clean indoor air is critical to preventing complications and ensuring healthier futures.

IAQ is a key determinant of pregnancy and early-life health. Pregnancy is a period of heightened vulnerability, as pollutants can induce oxidative stress, inflammation, and impaired placental function. These pathways have been linked to complications for the mother, impaired fetal growth, congenital anomalies, and increased risks of respiratory and neurodevelopmental disorders in children.

Low birth weight and prematurity are the most consistently reported outcomes of degraded IAQ during pregnancy; evidence from large-scale analyses emphasizes this burden. A meta-analysis of more than two million pregnancies in low- and middle-income countries found higher risks of low birth weight and small-for-gestational-age infants linked to biomass fuels, kerosene, and PM2.5. The World Health Organization Global Survey across 22 countries also found associations with low birth weight, while in China, where concentrations were greatest, preterm birth was elevated as well. Local studies reinforce these patterns. In Chennai, household mold and water leakage were significantly associated with low birth weight, and in Changsha, traffic-related NO2 and perinatal dampness interacted to raise preterm birth risk. Pollutant-specific effects are also evident: even at very low concentrations, formaldehyde has been connected to measurable reductions in infant size and head circumference, and exposures to secondhand smoke and household product emissions in Los Angeles increased risks of adverse pregnancy outcomes. Importantly, these latter risks were substantially reduced in homes with frequent window ventilation, highlighting the modifying role of household airflow. Beyond growth and timing outcomes, prenatal exposures have also been linked to maternal complications including preeclampsia, hypertensive disorders, and spontaneous abortion, and to pre-labor rupture of membranes, with emerging evidence that maternal hemoglobin status and iron supplementation may modify risk.

Respiratory and developmental health effects in early life are consistently linked to poor IAQ during pregnancy. Large-scale evidence underscores this burden: a meta-analysis of more than 387,000 mother-child pairs found that prenatal exposure to household air pollution—particularly CO, NO2, and PM2.5—was associated with higher risks of childhood respiratory illnesses. Birth cohorts reinforce these patterns. In Krakow, infants with higher prenatal PM2.5 exposure experienced significantly more wheezing and difficult-breathing days in their first two years of life, while in Japan, early-life exposure to indoor VOCs such as xylene, benzene, and toluene was tied to lower developmental scores at age three. Broader behavioral consequences have also been observed: in South Africa, prenatal exposure to indoor particulate matter and VOCs, combined with psychosocial stressors, predicted more adverse internalizing and externalizing child behavior trajectories. Reviews integrating this literature confirm that postnatal risks extend beyond respiratory infections and asthma to include neurodevelopmental and mental health effects, with climate-linked stressors such as heat and extreme weather compounding vulnerability.

Congenital anomalies are another pathway through which degraded IAQ affects maternal-fetal health. A 2025 review highlighted structural birth defects as a consistent outcome of prenatal pollutant exposure, situating them alongside growth restriction and neurodevelopmental effects. More specific associations have been observed in individual cohorts. In East China, elevated maternal exposure to indoor VOCs and PM2.5 was strongly linked to congenital heart defects in offspring, with risks further amplified by recent home renovations and mitigated by the use of kitchen ventilators. Neural tube defects have also been implicated: in a case-control study of over 1,000 mothers in China, indoor air pollution exposure increased risk, and genetic variations modified susceptibility, showing a dose-response pattern with placental PAHs..

Evidence consistently shows that poor IAQ during pregnancy endangers both maternal health and child development, making it a critical public health concern with lifelong consequences.

 

2.6 — Air Quality and Productivity

Indoor air quality directly influences how people learn, perform, and make decisions. Because concentration, memory, and judgment depend on the air we breathe, maintaining clean indoor environments is essential for focus and productivity.

IAQ is a central determinant of human performance and productivity. Work and learning rely on sustained attention, memory, and decision making, all of which are sensitive to the quality of the air we breathe. A growing body of research shows that degraded IAQ reduces cognitive efficiency, slows task completion, and increases error rates, while cleaner air yields measurable improvements. These effects appear rapidly and are reversible, making IAQ not only a health variable but also a real-time driver of performance.

Research shows that poor IAQ can reduce office task performance by 6–9%, with effects confirmed in both laboratory exposures and multi-week field interventions. Analyses highlight ventilation as a central factor, with studies suggesting that every 10% increase in dissatisfied occupants corresponds to about a 1% drop in work output, and that minimum airflow designs can lead to losses of 5–9%. Controlled assessments report modest gains when ventilation is doubled or pollution loads are reduced, while systematic reviews of dozens of investigations consistently find that low ventilation and high CO2 impair productivity, even as effect sizes vary by building and method. Broader syntheses conclude that suboptimal thermal and air quality conditions can reduce adult productivity by 5–10% and children’s learning outcomes by 15–30%.

Economic evidence indicates that healthier indoor environments can reduce complaints and absenteeism and may raise output by 5–15%. An early national estimate published in 1997 projected that improved conditions in United States buildings could generate $30–170 billion annually in health and productivity benefits, with financial returns exceeding costs by factors of 18–47. At the building level, workplace efficiency improvements have been shown to offset ventilation costs with typical payback times under two years. More broadly, analyses conclude that any energy savings from relaxed air and thermal standards are outweighed by productivity losses, emphasizing the dominance of labor costs over energy costs in the economics of indoor environments.

Evidence consistently shows that IAQ shapes how people think, work, and learn, linking cleaner environments to sharper cognition, higher productivity, and better learning outcomes. Because these effects extend across workplaces, schools, and homes, performance outcomes highlight clean indoor air as essential to public health and human potential.

2.7 — How Air Quality Affects Your Sleep and What You Can Do About It

Poor indoor air quality disrupts sleep. Because deep, uninterrupted rest depends on clean, well-ventilated air, maintaining healthy bedroom conditions is essential for nightly restoration and next-day performance.

IAQ is a key determinant of sleep quality. Sleep is a restorative process that supports both physiological recovery and cognitive function, yet it often takes place in environments where ventilation is limited and pollutants accumulate.

Field investigations show that bedroom air quality tends to deteriorate overnight, and this deterioration corresponds with disrupted sleep. CO2 levels commonly rise above recommended thresholds in closed rooms, and higher concentrations have been associated with reduced sleep efficiency, shallower sleep stages, and more frequent awakenings. PM2.5 and VOCs, including formaldehyde, also accumulate under low-ventilation conditions, with levels frequently exceeding health guidelines, particularly in households with smoking or other strong indoor sources. Cross-sectional surveys indicate that biological contaminants such as cockroaches and mold, as well as discomfort from low temperatures, contribute to disturbed sleep. Large-scale survey data further suggest that demographic factors, including gender and income, shape how environmental stressors are perceived and tolerated.

Intervention studies confirm that bedroom ventilation directly influences sleep. Lowering CO2 from very high levels (>2,000 ppm) to near background produced deeper sleep, fewer awakenings, and better next-day alertness. Shorter trials show that even modest improvements in ventilation are enough to shift sleep stages, though opening windows can also introduce more PM2.5 and noise. Larger field experiments extend this evidence by demonstrating that sustained low ventilation leads to lighter sleep and more nighttime interruptions, while greater airflow improves sleep duration and quality. Studies in older adults report that reduced ventilation corresponds with more frequent awakenings and changes in sleep depth, pointing to potential age-related differences in response. Small pilot work further suggests that temperature and humidity interact with CO2, with elevated levels of both linked to reduced sleep efficiency.

Evidence shows that bedroom air quality influences sleep patterns and recovery, with better ventilation and lower pollutant levels improving both rest and next-day functioning. Because restorative sleep underpins physical, cognitive, and emotional health, sleep outcomes highlight IAQ as a vital component of overall well-being.

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