Environmental Defense Fund, Austin, TX, USA.
Department of Veterinary Physiology and Pharmacology, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USA.
Environ Int. 2023 Feb;172:107772. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2023.107772. Epub 2023 Jan 25.
Climate change will cause a range of related risks, including increases in infectious and chronic disease, intensified social and economic stresses, and more frequent extreme weather events. Vulnerable groups will be disproportionately affected due to greater exposure to climate risks and lower ability to prepare, adapt, and recover from their effects. Better understanding of the intersection of vulnerability and climate change risks is required to identify the most important drivers of future climate risks and effectively build resilience and deploy targeted adaptation efforts. Incorporating community stakeholder input, we identified and integrated available public health, social, economic, environmental, and climate data in the United States (U.S.), comprising 184 indicators, to develop a Climate Vulnerability Index (CVI) composed of four baseline vulnerabilities (health, social/economic, infrastructure, and environment) and three climate change risks (health, social/economic, extreme events). We find that the vulnerability to and risks from climate change are highly heterogeneous across the U.S. at the census tract scale, and geospatially cluster into complementary areas with similar climate risks but differing baseline vulnerabilities. Our results therefore demonstrate that not only are climate change risks both broadly and variably distributed across the U.S., but also that existing disparities are often further exacerbated by climate change. The CVI thus lays a data-driven, scientific foundation for future research on the intersection of climate change risks with health and other inequalities, while also identifying health impacts of climate change as the greatest research gap. Moreover, given U.S. government initiatives surrounding climate and equity, the CVI can be instrumental in empowering communities and policymakers to better prioritize resources and target interventions, providing a template for addressing local-scale climate and environmental justice globally.
气候变化将带来一系列相关风险,包括传染病和慢性病的增加、社会和经济压力加剧以及极端天气事件更加频繁。由于更容易受到气候风险的影响,且应对、适应和从其影响中恢复的能力较低,弱势群体将受到不成比例的影响。需要更好地了解脆弱性和气候变化风险之间的交叉点,以确定未来气候风险的最重要驱动因素,并有效地建立弹性和部署有针对性的适应措施。我们结合社区利益相关者的投入,在美国(U.S.)确定并整合了现有的公共卫生、社会、经济、环境和气候数据,包含 184 个指标,以开发一个由四个基础脆弱性(健康、社会/经济、基础设施和环境)和三个气候变化风险(健康、社会/经济和极端事件)组成的气候脆弱性指数(CVI)。我们发现,在美国各地的普查区尺度上,气候变化的脆弱性和风险具有高度异质性,并且在具有相似气候风险但基础脆弱性不同的互补区域中呈现出空间聚类。因此,我们的研究结果表明,不仅气候变化风险在美国广泛且不同程度地分布,而且现有的差异往往因气候变化而进一步加剧。CVI 为未来研究气候变化风险与健康和其他不平等之间的交叉点奠定了数据驱动的科学基础,同时也确定了气候变化对健康的影响是最大的研究差距。此外,鉴于美国政府围绕气候和公平的举措,CVI 可以帮助社区和政策制定者更好地分配资源和实施干预措施,为在全球范围内解决地方尺度的气候和环境正义问题提供模板。