Kim Yoonhee, Gasparrini Antonio, Hashizume Masahiro, Honda Yasushi, Ng Chris Fook Sheng, Armstrong Ben
Department of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Nagasaki University, Nagasaki, Japan
Department of Social and Environmental Health Research, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
Environ Health Perspect. 2017 Jul 6;125(7):077005. doi: 10.1289/EHP493.
In March 2011, the Great East Japan Earthquake devastated several power stations and caused severe electricity shortages. This accident was followed by the implementation of policies to reduce summer electricity consumption in the affected areas, for example, by limiting air-conditioning (AC) use. This provided a natural experimental scenario to investigate if these policies were associated with an increase in heat-related mortality.
We examined whether the reduced electricity consumption in warm season modified heat-related mortality from 2008 to 2012.
We conducted prefecture-specific interrupted time-series (ITS) analyses to compare temperature-mortality associations before and after the earthquake, and used meta-analysis to generate combined effect estimates for the most affected and less affected areas (prefectures with >10% or ≤10% reductions in electricity consumption, respectively). We then examined whether the temperature-mortality association in Tokyo, one of the most affected areas, was modified by the percent reduction in electricity consumption relative to expected consumption for comparable days before the earthquake.
Contrary to expectations, we estimated a 5-9% reduction in all-cause heat-related mortality after the earthquake in the 15 prefectures with the greatest reduction in electricity consumption, and little change in the other prefectures. However, the percent reduction in observed vs. expected daily electricity consumption after the earthquake did not significantly modify daily heat-related mortality in Tokyo.
In the prefectures with the greatest reductions in electricity consumption, heat-related mortality decreased rather than increased following the Great East Japan Earthquake. Additional research is needed to determine whether this finding holds for other populations and regions, and to clarify its implications for policies to reduce the consequences of climate change on health. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP493.
2011年3月,东日本大地震摧毁了多个发电站,导致严重的电力短缺。此次事故之后,受灾地区实施了旨在减少夏季用电量的政策,例如限制空调使用。这提供了一个自然实验场景,以调查这些政策是否与与热相关的死亡率上升有关。
我们研究了2008年至2012年暖季用电量的减少是否改变了与热相关的死亡率。
我们进行了特定辖区的中断时间序列(ITS)分析,以比较地震前后温度与死亡率之间的关联,并使用荟萃分析来生成受影响最大和受影响较小地区(分别为用电量减少超过10%或≤10%的辖区)的综合效应估计值。然后,我们研究了受灾最严重的地区之一东京的温度与死亡率之间的关联是否因相对于地震前可比日期预期用电量的减少百分比而发生改变。
与预期相反,我们估计,在用电量减少最多的15个辖区,地震后与热相关的全因死亡率降低了5%-9%,而其他辖区变化不大。然而,地震后观察到的每日用电量与预期用电量的减少百分比并未显著改变东京每日与热相关的死亡率。
在用电量减少最多的辖区,东日本大地震后与热相关的死亡率下降而非上升。需要进一步研究以确定这一发现是否适用于其他人群和地区,并阐明其对减少气候变化对健康影响的政策的意义。https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP493