Belova Anna, Gould Caitlin A, Munson Kate, Howell Madison, Trevisan Claire, Obradovich Nick, Martinich Jeremy
ICF, Inc. Fairfax VA USA.
Climate Change Division U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Washington DC USA.
Geohealth. 2022 May 1;6(5):e2021GH000580. doi: 10.1029/2021GH000580. eCollection 2022 May.
We quantify and monetize changes in suicide incidence across the conterminous United States (U.S.) in response to increasing levels of warming. We develop an integrated health impact assessment model using binned and linear specifications of temperature-suicide relationship estimates from Mullins and White (2019), in combination with monthly age- and sex-specific baseline suicide incidence rates, projections of six climate models, and population projections at the conterminous U.S. county scale. We evaluate the difference in the annual number of suicides in the U.S. corresponding to 1-6°C of warming compared to 1986-2005 average temperatures (mean U.S. temperatures) and compute 2015 population attributable fractions (PAFs). We use the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Value of a Statistical Life to estimate the economic value of avoiding these mortality impacts. Assuming the 2015 population size, warming of 1-6°C could result in an annual increase of 283-1,660 additional suicide cases, corresponding to a PAF of 0.7%-4.1%. The annual economic value of avoiding these impacts is $2 billion-$3 billion (2015 U.S. dollars, 3% discount rate, and 2015 income level). Estimates based on linear temperature-suicide relationship specifications are 7% larger than those based on binned temperature specifications. Accounting for displacement decreases estimates by 17%, while accounting for precipitation decreases estimates by 7%. Population growth between 2015 and the future warming degree arrival year increases estimates by 15%-38%. Further research is needed to quantify and monetize other climate-related mental health outcomes (e.g., anxiety and depression) and to characterize these risks in socially vulnerable populations.
我们对美国本土因气候变暖导致的自杀率变化进行了量化并估算了其经济价值。我们利用穆林斯和怀特(2019年)对温度与自杀关系的分箱和线性估计规范,结合每月特定年龄和性别的自杀率基线、六个气候模型的预测以及美国本土县规模的人口预测,开发了一个综合健康影响评估模型。我们评估了与1986 - 2005年平均气温(美国平均气温)相比,美国气温升高1 - 6°C时每年自杀人数的差异,并计算了2015年的人群归因分数(PAF)。我们使用美国环境保护局的统计生命价值来估算避免这些死亡影响的经济价值。假设2015年的人口规模,气温升高1 - 6°C可能导致每年额外增加283 - 1660例自杀案例,对应的PAF为0.7% - 4.1%。避免这些影响的年度经济价值为20亿 - 30亿美元(2015年美元,3%的贴现率以及2015年的收入水平)。基于线性温度 - 自杀关系规范的估计比基于分箱温度规范的估计大7%。考虑到人口迁移会使估计值降低17%,而考虑降水会使估计值降低7%。2015年至未来升温程度达到年份之间的人口增长会使估计值增加15% - 38%。需要进一步研究来量化和估算其他与气候相关的心理健康结果(如焦虑和抑郁),并描述社会弱势群体中的这些风险。