Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, New York, NY, USA.
Curr Environ Health Rep. 2020 Dec;7(4):371-383. doi: 10.1007/s40572-020-00295-0. Epub 2020 Nov 11.
Power outages, a common and underappreciated consequence of natural disasters, are increasing in number and severity due to climate change and aging electricity grids. This narrative review synthesizes the literature on power outages and health in communities.
We searched Google Scholar and PubMed for English language studies with titles or abstracts containing "power outage" or "blackout." We limited papers to those that explicitly mentioned power outages or blackouts as the exposure of interest for health outcomes among individuals living in the community. We also used the reference list of these studies to identify additional studies. The final sample included 50 articles published between 2004 and 2020, with 17 (34%) appearing between 2016 and 2020. Exposure assessment remains basic and inconsistent, with 43 (86%) of studies evaluating single, large-scale power outages. Few studies used spatial and temporal control groups to assess changes in health outcomes attributable to power outages. Recent research linked data from electricity providers on power outages in space and time and included factors such as number of customers affected and duration to estimate exposure. The existing literature suggests that power outages have important health consequences ranging from carbon monoxide poisoning, temperature-related illness, gastrointestinal illness, and mortality to all-cause, cardiovascular, respiratory, and renal disease hospitalizations, especially for individuals relying on electricity-dependent medical equipment. Nonetheless the studies are limited, and more work is needed to better define and capture the relevant exposures and outcomes. Studies should consider modifying factors such as socioeconomic and other vulnerabilities as well as how community resiliency can minimize the adverse impacts of widespread major power outages.
目的综述:由于气候变化和电网老化,停电已成为一种常见且未被充分认识的自然灾害后果,其数量和严重程度正在增加。本叙述性综述综合了社区停电与健康方面的文献。
最近发现:我们在 Google Scholar 和 PubMed 上以包含“power outage”或“blackout”的标题或摘要搜索了英文文献。我们将论文限定为那些明确将停电或断电作为社区中个体健康结果的暴露因素的文献。我们还使用这些研究的参考文献来确定其他研究。最终样本包括 2004 年至 2020 年间发表的 50 篇文章,其中 17 篇(34%)发表于 2016 年至 2020 年。暴露评估仍然很基础且不一致,43 篇(86%)研究评估了单次大规模停电。很少有研究使用空间和时间对照来评估归因于停电的健康结果变化。最近的研究将电力供应商关于停电的时空数据与受影响客户数量和持续时间等因素结合起来,以估计暴露情况。现有文献表明,停电会对健康产生重要影响,包括一氧化碳中毒、与温度相关的疾病、胃肠道疾病和死亡,以及全因、心血管、呼吸和肾脏疾病住院,特别是对于依赖电力的医疗设备的个体。尽管如此,这些研究仍有限,需要更多的工作来更好地定义和捕捉相关的暴露和结果。研究应考虑修改因素,如社会经济和其他脆弱性,以及社区弹性如何最小化广泛的重大停电的不利影响。