Public Health England, London, United Kingdom.
Public Health England, London, United Kingdom.
Public Health. 2018 Aug;161:171-191. doi: 10.1016/j.puhe.2018.06.008. Epub 2018 Jul 12.
The objective of this study was to describe the mental health effects of high ambient temperatures and heat waves, determine whether heat-related morbidity and mortality are increased among people with known mental disorders and identify knowledge gaps to inform targeting of future research.
Systematic literature review and narrative synthesis.
A systematic review of published literature using MEDLINE, Embase and PsycINFO without geographical or temporal limits was conducted. We included studies that explicitly linked high ambient temperatures and/or heat waves to mental health outcomes. Evidence was graded using a National Institute of Health framework.
A total of 35 studies were included in the review, among which 34 were observational studies and one was a case-control study. Six broad mental health outcome categories were identified: suicide and heat; bipolar disorder, mania and depression and heat; schizophrenia and heat; organic mental health outcomes and heat including dementia; alcohol and substance misuse and heat; and multiple mental health outcomes/mental health service usage and heat. The studies included were heterogeneous in terms of study design, population, setting, exposure measures, outcomes and location making meta-analysis unfeasible. Fifteen studies showed an increased suicide risk with heat (relative risk [RR] 1.014-1.37 per 1 °C, P < 0.05; r = 0.10-0.64, P < 0.05). Increased risks of mental health-related admissions and emergency department visits at higher temperatures were also found. No evidence of change in community care use was found. Evidence for the impact of heat on other mental health outcomes was mixed.
High ambient temperatures have a range of mental health effects. The strongest evidence was found for increased suicide risk. Limited evidence was found for an increase in heat-related morbidity and mortality among people with known mental health problems. Knowledge gaps exist on the impact of high temperatures on many common mental health disorders. Mental health impacts should be incorporated into plans for the public health response to high temperatures, and as evidence evolves, psychological morbidity and mortality temperature thresholds should be incorporated into hot weather-warning systems.
本研究旨在描述高温环境和热浪对心理健康的影响,确定患有已知精神障碍的人群是否会因与热相关的发病率和死亡率增加,并确定知识空白以指导未来研究的重点。
系统文献综述和叙述性综合。
对 MEDLINE、Embase 和 PsycINFO 中的已发表文献进行了系统的文献回顾,无地理和时间限制。我们纳入了明确将高温和/或热浪与心理健康结果联系起来的研究。使用美国国立卫生研究院的框架对证据进行分级。
本综述共纳入 35 项研究,其中 34 项为观察性研究,1 项为病例对照研究。确定了六个广泛的心理健康结果类别:自杀与热;双相情感障碍、躁狂和抑郁与热;精神分裂症与热;与热相关的器质性精神健康结果包括痴呆;酒精和物质滥用与热;以及多种心理健康结果/精神卫生服务使用与热。这些研究在研究设计、人群、环境、暴露测量、结果和地点方面存在差异,使得进行荟萃分析变得不可行。15 项研究表明,高温下自杀风险增加(每升高 1°C 的相对风险 [RR] 为 1.014-1.37,P<0.05;r 值为 0.10-0.64,P<0.05)。还发现高温下与精神健康相关的入院和急诊就诊风险增加。没有发现社区护理使用变化的证据。关于高温对其他精神健康结果影响的证据参差不齐。
高温对心理健康有一系列影响。最强的证据是自杀风险增加。在患有已知精神健康问题的人群中,与热相关的发病率和死亡率增加的证据有限。高温对许多常见精神健康障碍的影响方面存在知识空白。应将高温对心理健康的影响纳入高温公共卫生应对计划,并随着证据的发展,将心理发病率和死亡率的温度阈值纳入高温天气预警系统。