School of Public Health and Social Work, Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation, Queensland University of Technology, Queensland, Australia.
School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics, Anhui Medical University, Hefei, China.
Environ Int. 2018 Jun;115:334-342. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2018.03.041. Epub 2018 Apr 6.
A heatwave can be a devastating natural disaster to human health, and elderly people are particularly vulnerable. With the continuing rise in earth's surface temperature alongside the world's aging population, research on the mortality burden of heatwave for the older population remains relatively sparse. The potential magnitude of benefits of averting such deaths may be considerable.
This paper examined the short-term mortality displacement (or "harvesting") of heatwave, characterized the heatwave-mortality relationship, and estimated death burden and health costs attributable to heatwave among the elderly in Australia.
We collected daily data on the temperature and deaths of people aged ≥75 years in the five largest cities of Australia (Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth and Adelaide), totaling 368,767 deaths in different periods between 1988 and 2011. A total of 15-tiered heatwave definitions, based on intensity (95th to 99th percentiles of temperature distribution) and duration (two or more consecutive days), were used to quantify heatwave effects, using time-series regression and random-effects meta-analysis. We calculated attributable deaths for each city and by different types of heatwave. Potential economic benefits in monetary terms were also estimated, considering that heat-related deaths are avoidable.
Among the Australian elderly population, we found significant associations between heatwave and deaths, with raised mortality immediately in the first few days followed by lower-than-expected mortality. In general, heatwave was associated with an average death increase of 28% (95% confidence interval: 15% to 42%), and greater increases were mostly observed for more intense heatwaves across multiple megacities. During the study period, there were dozens to hundreds of deaths attributable to heatwave for each city, equating to an economic loss of several million Australian dollars every year. Although the estimated attributable deaths varied by heatwave intensity and duration, the pattern was not consistent across cities.
Heatwave caused harvesting effects on mortality in the elderly population of Australia, and contributed to a substantial amount of death burden and indirect financial costs. To lessen the health impacts of heatwave in the affected regions, effective heatwave early warning systems and interventions targeted at the elderly population could be beneficial, both now and in the future.
热浪对人类健康可能是一种毁灭性的自然灾害,而老年人尤其脆弱。随着地球表面温度的持续上升和世界人口的老龄化,针对老年人口热浪死亡率负担的研究仍然相对较少。避免此类死亡的潜在收益可能相当可观。
本文研究了热浪的短期死亡率转移(或“收获”),描述了热浪与死亡率的关系,并估计了澳大利亚老年人因热浪导致的死亡负担和健康成本。
我们收集了澳大利亚五个最大城市(悉尼、墨尔本、布里斯班、珀斯和阿德莱德)≥75 岁人群的每日温度和死亡数据,在 1988 年至 2011 年期间不同时期共记录了 368767 例死亡。基于强度(温度分布的 95%到 99%分位数)和持续时间(两个或多个连续日),我们使用时间序列回归和随机效应荟萃分析,共定义了 15 个分层热浪定义来量化热浪效应。我们计算了每个城市和不同类型热浪的归因死亡人数。还考虑到与热相关的死亡是可以避免的,用货币计算了潜在的经济收益。
在澳大利亚老年人群中,我们发现热浪与死亡之间存在显著关联,最初几天死亡率升高,随后死亡率低于预期。一般来说,热浪与平均死亡率增加 28%(95%置信区间:15%至 42%)有关,在多个大城市,更强烈的热浪导致的死亡率增加幅度更大。在研究期间,每个城市都有数十到数百人归因于热浪死亡,每年造成数百万澳元的经济损失。尽管归因死亡人数因热浪强度和持续时间而异,但这种模式在不同城市并不一致。
热浪对澳大利亚老年人口的死亡率产生了收获效应,并导致了大量的死亡负担和间接经济成本。为了减轻热浪对受影响地区的健康影响,现在和将来,针对老年人口的有效热浪预警系统和干预措施可能会有所帮助。