Department of Environmental Health, School of Public Health, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, School of Engineering, Tufts University, Medford, MA, USA.
Public Health Rep. 2023 Nov-Dec;138(6):955-962. doi: 10.1177/00333549221148174. Epub 2023 Feb 1.
Although extreme heat can impact the health of anyone, certain groups are disproportionately affected. In urban settings, cooling centers are intended to reduce heat exposure by providing air-conditioned spaces to the public. We examined the characteristics of populations living near cooling centers and how well they serve areas with high social vulnerability.
We identified 1402 cooling centers in 81 US cities from publicly available sources and analyzed markers of urban heat and social vulnerability in relation to their locations. Within each city, we developed cooling center access areas, defined as the geographic area within a 0.5-mile walk from a center, and compared sociodemographic characteristics of populations living within versus outside the access areas. We analyzed results by city and geographic region to evaluate climate-relevant regional differences.
Access to cooling centers differed among cities, ranging from 0.01% (Atlanta, Georgia) to 63.2% (Washington, DC) of the population living within an access area. On average, cooling centers were in areas that had higher levels of social vulnerability, as measured by the number of people living in urban heat islands, annual household income below poverty, racial and ethnic minority status, low educational attainment, and high unemployment rate. However, access areas were less inclusive of adult populations aged ≥65 years than among populations aged <65 years.
Given the large percentage of individuals without access to cooling centers and the anticipated increase in frequency and severity of extreme heat events, the current distribution of centers in the urban areas that we examined may be insufficient to protect individuals from the adverse health effects of extreme heat, particularly in the absence of additional measures to reduce risk.
尽管极端高温会影响任何人的健康,但某些人群受到的影响更大。在城市环境中,降温中心旨在通过向公众提供空调空间来减少热暴露。我们研究了居住在降温中心附近的人群的特征,以及它们如何服务于社会脆弱性高的地区。
我们从公开来源中确定了美国 81 个城市的 1402 个降温中心,并分析了与它们位置相关的城市热和社会脆弱性的标志物。在每个城市内,我们开发了降温中心可达性区域,定义为从中心步行 0.5 英里范围内的地理区域,并比较了居住在可达性区域内和外的人群的社会人口学特征。我们按城市和地理区域分析结果,以评估与气候相关的区域差异。
降温中心的可达性因城市而异,从居住在可达性区域内的人口的 0.01%(亚特兰大,佐治亚州)到 63.2%(华盛顿特区)不等。平均而言,降温中心位于社会脆弱性水平较高的地区,这是通过居住在城市热岛中的人数、家庭年收入低于贫困线、种族和民族少数群体地位、低教育程度和高失业率来衡量的。然而,可达性区域对年龄≥65 岁的成年人口的包容性不如对<65 岁的人口。
鉴于很大一部分人无法获得降温中心,而且预计极端高温事件的频率和严重程度将会增加,我们研究的城市地区中心的当前分布可能不足以保护个人免受极端高温的不利健康影响,特别是在没有采取其他措施来降低风险的情况下。