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Time Use Implication of Clean Cookstoves in Rural Settings in Ghana: A Time Use Study.

Rebecca Kyerewaa Dwommoh PrahDaniel CarrionFelix Boakye OppongTheresa TawiahMohammed Nuhu MujtabaStephaney GyaaseAdolphine KwartengKenneth Ayuurebobi Ae-NgibiseOscar AgyeiMieks TwumasiFrancis AgbokeyKwaku Poku AsanteDarby W Jack
Published in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2020)
Whilst the health benefit of using clean cookstoves and fuels is widely known, there is limited information on the non-health benefit of these stoves, especially in low-middle-income countries. This paper reports the time use implications of using clean cookstoves and fuels by comparing liquified petroleum gas (LPG), an improved biomass cookstove (BioLite), and traditional biomass cookstoves (three-stone fires) in Ghana. Using survey-based time diaries, information on all the activities undertaken by study participants during a 24-h was collected and analyzed. The findings of the study show that LPG users spent significantly less time gathering firewood compared to the users of improved cookstoves and three-stone fires. LPG users spent slightly less time per cooking episode, generally, and there was no significant difference in cooking time across the three cookstoves mostly due to stove stacking. Time spent engaging in economic activities was highest for LPG users and improved biomass cookstove users, at least when compared to three-stone fire users. In this study, we provide evidence on the time use implications of clean cookstoves, highlighting their non-health benefits and supporting efforts towards the adoption and sustained used of clean cookstoves.
Keyphrases
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • health information
  • emergency department
  • physical activity
  • cross sectional
  • human health