A cross-sectional study characterizing the prevalence of utility service outages across demographic characteristics and health correlates in New York City.

IF 3.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Environmental Epidemiology Pub Date : 2025-01-09 eCollection Date: 2025-02-01 DOI:10.1097/EE9.0000000000000359
Vivian Do, Ariel Yuan, Kathryn Lane, Lauren Smalls Mantey, Eva Siegel, Carolyn Olson, Misbath Daouda, Joan A Casey, Diana Hernández
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Utility services for electricity, gas, heat, and hot water are necessities for everyday activities (e.g., lighting, cooking, and thermal safety). Utility outages can threaten health; however, information is limited on the prevalence of electricity, gas, heat, and hot water outages in representative studies. We characterized infrastructure-related electricity, gas, heat, and hot water outages in New York City (NYC) and within subgroups.

Methods: Using a representative 2022 survey of NYC adults (18+), we assessed the prevalence for 6+ hour utility outages and compared across building, demographic, and health subgroups. Building characteristics included age, number of floors, rental type, and owner/rental status. Demographics included household poverty, neighborhood poverty, and race/ethnicity. For health, we focused on cognitive impairment, electricity-dependent medical equipment use, and mental health conditions.

Results: Outages impacted 20% of NYC residents. Heat outages were nearly 3× and 2× more common in mid-rise and high-rise buildings respectively, vs. low-rise buildings. Similarly, hot water outages were 5× and over 6× more prevalent in mid-rise and high-rise residences. Renters faced 2× more heat and hot water outages compared with owners. Compared with low-poverty households, high-poverty households faced 2× more hot water outages. Residents with mental health conditions experienced more electricity (11% vs. 5%), heat (15% vs. 7%), and hot water (16% vs. 8%) outages compared with those without.

Conclusions: NYC utility outage prevalence varied by type with heat and hot water being most common. Disparities across building, sociodemographic, and health characteristics were also larger and more frequent for heat and hot water outages.

一项横断面研究,描述纽约市公用事业服务中断的流行程度,涉及人口特征和健康相关因素。
背景:电力、燃气、供热和热水等公用事业服务是日常活动(如照明、烹饪和热安全)的必需品。然而,在具有代表性的研究中,关于停电、停煤气、停暖气和停热水的发生率的信息十分有限。我们描述了纽约市与基础设施相关的停电、停气、停暖和停热水情况,以及各分组的停电、停气、停暖和停热水情况:我们利用 2022 年对纽约市成年人(18 岁以上)的代表性调查,评估了 6 小时以上停电的普遍程度,并对不同建筑、人口和健康亚群进行了比较。建筑物特征包括楼龄、楼层数、出租类型以及业主/租户身份。人口统计学特征包括家庭贫困、邻里贫困和种族/族裔。在健康方面,我们重点关注认知障碍、依赖电力的医疗设备使用情况以及精神健康状况:停电影响了 20% 的纽约市居民。与低层楼房相比,中层楼房和高层楼房停暖的频率分别高出近 3 倍和 2 倍。同样,热水供应中断的情况在中层和高层住宅中也分别多出 5 倍和 6 倍以上。与业主相比,租房者面临的停暖和停热水问题要多出 2 倍。与低贫困家庭相比,高贫困家庭面临的热水供应中断情况要多出 2 倍。与没有精神疾病的居民相比,有精神疾病的居民遭遇的停电(11% 对 5%)、停暖(15% 对 7%)和停热水(16% 对 8%)次数更多:纽约市水电供应中断的发生率因类型而异,其中暖气和热水最常见。建筑物、社会人口和健康特征之间的差异在暖气和热水故障中也更大更频繁。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Environmental Epidemiology
Environmental Epidemiology Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
2.80%
发文量
71
审稿时长
25 weeks
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