Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, Drexel Dornsife School of Public Health, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Departments of Environmental Medicine and Public Health and Pediatrics, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
Int J Biometeorol. 2022 Aug;66(8):1683-1698. doi: 10.1007/s00484-022-02310-5. Epub 2022 Jun 25.
Global climate change is leading to higher ambient temperatures and more frequent heatwaves. To date, impacts of ambient extreme heat on childhood morbidity have been understudied, although-given children's physiologic susceptibility, with smaller body surface-to-mass ratios, and many years of increasing temperatures ahead-there is an urgent need for better information to inform public health policies and clinical approaches. In this review, we aim to (1) identify pediatric morbidity outcomes previously associated with extreme heat, (2) to identify predisposing co-morbidities which may make children more susceptible to heat-related outcomes, and (3) to map the current body of available literature. A scoping review of the current full-text literature was conducted using the Arksey and O'Malley framework Int J Soc Res Methodol 8:19-32, (2015). Search terms for (1) pediatric population, (2) heat exposures, (3) ambient conditions, and (4) adverse outcomes were combined into a comprehensive PubMed and Medline literature search. Of the 1753 publications identified, a total of 20 relevant studies were ultimately selected based on selection criteria of relevance to US urban populations. Most identified studies supported positive associations between high extreme temperature exposures and heat-related illness, dehydration/electrolyte imbalance, general symptoms, diarrhea and digestion disorders, infectious diseases/infections, asthma/wheeze, and injury. Most studies found no association with renal disease, cardiovascular diseases, or diabetes mellitus. Results were mixed for other respiratory diseases and mental health/psychological disorders. Very few of the identified studies examined susceptibility to pre-existing conditions; Cystic Fibrosis was the only co-morbidity for which we found significant evidence. Further research is needed to understand the nuances of associations between extreme heat and specific outcomes-particularly how associations may vary by child age, sex, race/ ethnicity, community characteristics, and other pre-existing conditions.
全球气候变化导致环境温度升高和热浪频发。迄今为止,环境极端高温对儿童发病率的影响尚未得到充分研究,尽管考虑到儿童的生理易感性,其体表面积与体重的比例较小,而且未来多年气温还会持续升高,因此迫切需要更好的信息来为公共卫生政策和临床方法提供依据。在这篇综述中,我们旨在:(1) 确定先前与极端高温相关的儿科发病率结果;(2) 确定可能使儿童更容易受到与热相关结果影响的潜在合并症;(3) 绘制现有文献的概述。本研究采用 Arksey 和 O'Malley 框架,对当前全文文献进行了范围综述,该框架发表于 Int J Soc Res Methodol 8:19-32, (2015)。使用以下搜索词对(1)儿科人群、(2)热暴露、(3)环境条件和(4)不良结果进行综合,进行了全面的 PubMed 和 Medline 文献检索。在确定的 1753 篇出版物中,最终根据与美国城市人群相关的选择标准,共选择了 20 项相关研究。大多数确定的研究支持高温极端暴露与热相关疾病、脱水/电解质失衡、一般症状、腹泻和消化障碍、传染病/感染、哮喘/喘息以及伤害之间存在正相关。大多数研究发现与肾脏疾病、心血管疾病或糖尿病之间没有关联。对于其他呼吸道疾病和心理健康/心理障碍,结果存在差异。在确定的研究中,很少有研究检查对现有疾病的易感性;我们发现囊性纤维化是唯一存在显著证据的合并症。需要进一步研究以了解极端高温与特定结果之间的细微关联,尤其是关联如何因儿童年龄、性别、种族/民族、社区特征和其他现有条件而异。