A Heat Emergency: Urban Heat Exposure and Access to Refuge in Richmond, VA

IF 4.3 2区 医学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Geohealth Pub Date : 2024-06-21 DOI:10.1029/2023GH000985
Peter Braun, Todd Lookingbill, Beth Zizzamia, Jeremy Hoffman, Jessica Rosner, Daisy Banta
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Abstract

The urban heat island effect exacerbates independent climate change-induced shifts toward longer, stronger, and more frequent heat extremes. Environmental inequity, driven by a history of racially motivated urban planning policies, has led particular demographics to bear the worst impacts of urban heat exposure and thus also climate change. These impacts cause adverse health outcomes in the form of heat emergencies. Through a novel demographic and spatial analysis of heat-related illness Emergency Medical Services data from Richmond, Virginia, this study investigates the relationships between heat health emergencies and intra-urban heat islands quantified through three heat exposure metrics. We also evaluate the accessibility of built refuge from urban heat in the form of public transit infrastructure, libraries, and government cooling centers in relation to these emergencies. We found that heat emergencies are inequitably distributed among racial, age, and socioeconomic groups in Richmond, particularly among residents identified as Male, Black or African American, 50+ years old, and experiencing mental health, intoxication, and/or homelessness. We found significant associations between the location of these heat emergencies and urban heat islands as estimated from remotely-sensed surface and community science-derived air temperature metrics, but not a co-estimated heat index. We also found that available refuge facilities are insufficiently located to protect individuals with reduced mobility across areas with the highest number of heat-related health emergencies. Community involvement in the mitigation and management of extreme heat threats, especially for those disproportionately impacted, is necessary to decrease the number of summertime heat illnesses.

Abstract Image

高温紧急状况:弗吉尼亚州里士满的城市热暴露和避难所通道
城市热岛效应加剧了独立的气候变化引起的向更长、更强和更频繁的极端高温的转变。历史上出于种族动机的城市规划政策导致的环境不平等,使特定人口群体承受了城市热暴露的最严重影响,从而也影响了气候变化。这些影响以高温突发事件的形式造成了不良的健康后果。本研究通过对弗吉尼亚州里士满的热相关疾病紧急医疗服务数据进行新颖的人口和空间分析,调查了热健康紧急情况与通过三种热暴露指标量化的城市内热岛之间的关系。我们还评估了公共交通基础设施、图书馆和政府冷却中心等城市避暑建筑与这些紧急情况之间的关系。我们发现,在里士满的种族、年龄和社会经济群体中,高温突发事件的分布并不公平,尤其是在男性、黑人或非裔美国人、50 岁以上以及精神健康、醉酒和/或无家可归的居民中。我们发现,根据遥感地表温度和社区科学空气温度指标估算,这些高温紧急事件的发生地点与城市热岛之间存在重大关联,但与共同估算的高温指数无关。我们还发现,在与高温有关的健康突发事件最多的地区,现有避难设施的位置不足以保护行动不便的人。要减少夏季高温疾病的数量,社区有必要参与极端高温威胁的缓解和管理,尤其是对那些受到严重影响的人群。
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来源期刊
Geohealth
Geohealth Environmental Science-Pollution
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
6.20%
发文量
124
审稿时长
19 weeks
期刊介绍: GeoHealth will publish original research, reviews, policy discussions, and commentaries that cover the growing science on the interface among the Earth, atmospheric, oceans and environmental sciences, ecology, and the agricultural and health sciences. The journal will cover a wide variety of global and local issues including the impacts of climate change on human, agricultural, and ecosystem health, air and water pollution, environmental persistence of herbicides and pesticides, radiation and health, geomedicine, and the health effects of disasters. Many of these topics and others are of critical importance in the developing world and all require bringing together leading research across multiple disciplines.
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