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  4. Multiple Trigger Points for Quantifying Heat-Health Impacts: New Evidence from a Hot Climate
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Multiple Trigger Points for Quantifying Heat-Health Impacts: New Evidence from a Hot Climate

Full metadata

Title
Multiple Trigger Points for Quantifying Heat-Health Impacts: New Evidence from a Hot Climate
Description

Background: Extreme heat is a public health challenge. The scarcity of directly comparable studies on the association of heat with morbidity and mortality and the inconsistent identification of threshold temperatures for severe impacts hampers the development of comprehensive strategies aimed at reducing adverse heat-health events.

Objectives: This quantitative study was designed to link temperature with mortality and morbidity events in Maricopa County, Arizona, USA, with a focus on the summer season.

Methods: Using Poisson regression models that controlled for temporal confounders, we assessed daily temperature–health associations for a suite of mortality and morbidity events, diagnoses, and temperature metrics. Minimum risk temperatures, increasing risk temperatures, and excess risk temperatures were statistically identified to represent different “trigger points” at which heat-health intervention measures might be activated.

Results: We found significant and consistent associations of high environmental temperature with all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, heat-related mortality, and mortality resulting from conditions that are consequences of heat and dehydration. Hospitalizations and emergency department visits due to heat-related conditions and conditions associated with consequences of heat and dehydration were also strongly associated with high temperatures, and there were several times more of those events than there were deaths. For each temperature metric, we observed large contrasts in trigger points (up to 22°C) across multiple health events and diagnoses.

Conclusion: Consideration of multiple health events and diagnoses together with a comprehensive approach to identifying threshold temperatures revealed large differences in trigger points for possible interventions related to heat. Providing an array of heat trigger points applicable for different end-users may improve the public health response to a problem that is projected to worsen in the coming decades.

Date Created
2016-02-01
Contributors
  • Pettiti, Diana B. (Author)
  • Hondula, David M. (Author)
  • Yang, Shuo (Author)
  • Harlan, Sharon L. (Author)
  • Chowell, Gerardo (Author)
Topical Subject
  • Public Health
  • Urban Heat
  • Heat Mortality
  • morbidity
Resource Type
Text
Extent
8 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Phoenix Regional Heat and Air Quality Knowledge Repository
Identifier
Digital object identifier: 10.1289/ehp.1409119
Peer-reviewed
Open Access
No
Series
Journal Article
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.45453
Preferred Citation

Petitti, DB, et. al. (2016). Multiple trigger points for quantifying heat-health impacts: new evidence from a hot climate. Environmental health perspectives, 124:2, 176. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.1409119

Level of coding
minimal
Cataloging Standards
asu1
Note
Corresponding Author:
Diana B. Petitti
University of Arizona
diana.petitti@yahoo.com
System Created
  • 2017-09-28 06:26:33
System Modified
  • 2022-05-10 05:56:23
  •     
  • 4 years 1 month ago
Additional Formats
  • OAI Dublin Core
  • MODS XML

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