dc.description.abstract | The field of buildings, health and human experiences
may be divided between conditions (a) with scientific
support for causal relations between exposure and
health effects, e.g. dampness in buildings and asthma
exacerbation; (b) lacking such scientific support, e.g.
“sick building syndrome” (SBS). b) conditions are
often disregarded as imaginations, psychogenic etc.
Traditional ideas are (1) the brain registers what
happens in- and outside the body, thus reports of
symptoms and experiences “objectively” reflect the
underlying biological processes; (2) all symptoms and
experiences result from biological processes in the
body, often due to external causes. Emerging
knowledge indicates that the brain instead creates all
consciously experiences. In principle, experiences are
“integrations” of (I) previous experiences (i.e. acting
as models to generate predictions on future events)
and (II) what actually happens (i.e. inputs to the brain,
e.g. from senses); (I) and (II) themselves not being
consciously experienced. In this “integration”, factors
(I) vs. (II) may have any distribution. If (II) dominates,
the traditional model may fit, i.e. experience is rather
equivalent to what actually happens. If (I) dominates,
the traditional model fails, experience has limited
relevance to what actually happens and may be
understood as a “copy” based on previous
experiences; e.g. still getting asthma(like) symptoms
in a building long time after proper renovation of
water-damages. This new knowledge offers plausible
explanations for learned phenomena like SBS,
“multiple chemical sensitivities”, “electromagnetic
hypersensitivity” and other conditions with limited
scientific documentation for causality between
associated environmental factors, e.g. “building”, “electromagnetic” and “chemical”, and experiences
like symptoms. Important implications are (A) the
symptoms and experiences in e.g. “SBS” are just as
real as in any other medical condition; (B) as the
symptoms and experiences in such conditions are not
caused by the associated factor (e.g. “building”), nor
through mechanisms like “syndrome”,
“(hyper)sensitivity” etc.; such misleading terms
should be abandoned. The new concept and phenomenon description “Symptoms Associated with
Environmental Factors” (SAEF) offers a paradigm
shift. SAEF opens for a better understanding of such
phenomena, including prevention, treatment and the
need for interdisciplinary approaches. | en_US |
dc.identifier.citation | Haanes JV: Understanding “Symptoms Associated with Environmental Factors” (SAEF) in buildings; e.g. “sick building syndrome”, “electromagnetic
hypersensitivity” and “multiple chemical sensitivity”. In: Cao G, Holøs SB, Kim, G. Schild. Healthy Buildings 2021 – Europe
Proceedings of the 17th International Healthy Buildings Conference 21-23 June 2021
, 2021. SINTEF akademisk forlag p. 415-420 | en_US |