Klein Rosenthal Joyce, Kinney Patrick L, Metzger Kristina B
Harvard University Graduate School of Design, Department of Urban Planning & Design, 48 Quincy Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA; Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning & Preservation, Urban Planning Program, 400 Avery Hall, 1172 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY 10027, USA.
Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health Sciences, 722W. 168th St., New York, NY 10032, USA.
Health Place. 2014 Nov;30:45-60. doi: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2014.07.014. Epub 2014 Sep 6.
The health impacts of exposure to summertime heat are a significant problem in New York City (NYC) and for many cities and are expected to increase with a warming climate. Most studies on heat-related mortality have examined risk factors at the municipal or regional scale and may have missed the intra-urban variation of vulnerability that might inform prevention strategies. We evaluated whether place-based characteristics (socioeconomic/demographic and health factors, as well as the built and biophysical environment) may be associated with greater risk of heat-related mortality for seniors during heat events in NYC. As a measure of relative vulnerability to heat, we used the natural cause mortality rate ratio among those aged 65 and over (MRR65+), comparing extremely hot days (maximum heat index 100°F+) to all warm season days, across 1997-2006 for NYC's 59 Community Districts and 42 United Hospital Fund neighborhoods. Significant positive associations were found between the MRR65+ and neighborhood-level characteristics: poverty, poor housing conditions, lower rates of access to air-conditioning, impervious land cover, surface temperatures aggregated to the area-level, and seniors' hypertension. Percent Black/African American and household poverty were strong negative predictors of seniors' air conditioning access in multivariate regression analysis.
在纽约市以及许多城市,夏季高温暴露对健康的影响都是一个重大问题,而且预计随着气候变暖,这一问题还会加剧。大多数关于与高温相关死亡率的研究都在城市或区域层面考察了风险因素,可能忽略了城市内部脆弱性的差异,而这些差异可能为预防策略提供依据。我们评估了基于地点的特征(社会经济/人口统计学和健康因素,以及建成环境和生物物理环境)是否可能与纽约市高温事件期间老年人与高温相关的更高死亡风险相关。作为对高温相对脆弱性的一种衡量,我们使用了65岁及以上人群的自然原因死亡率比(MRR65+),将极热日(最高热指数100°F以上)与整个暖季的所有日子进行比较,数据涵盖了1997年至2006年纽约市的59个社区区和42个联合医院基金社区。在MRR65+与社区层面特征之间发现了显著的正相关关系:贫困、住房条件差、空调使用率低、不透水地面覆盖、区域层面汇总的地表温度以及老年人的高血压。在多变量回归分析中,黑人/非裔美国人的比例和家庭贫困是老年人空调使用率的强有力负预测因素。