纽约州停电与儿科意外伤害住院情况

IF 3.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Alexander J Northrop, Nina M. Flores, V. Do, Perry E. Sheffield, Joan A. Casey
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在过去的十年中,美国的电力中断(停电)事件有所增加,尤其是由于天气事件造成的停电。这些停电事件对健康产生了一系列影响,但对儿童的影响大多未作研究。在此,我们调查了停电与意外伤害住院之间的关系,意外伤害是儿童发病率的主要原因。研究方法研究地点为纽约州(NYS),时间为 2017 年至 2020 年。根据纽约州公共服务部的记录,并按照农村、城市非纽约市(NYC)和纽约市地区进行分层,将停电暴露定义为电力运营地区≥10%、≥20%和≥50%的用户停电。结果每日街区组级儿科伤害住院数据来自全州规划与研究合作系统 (SPARCS)。我们采用了病例交叉研究设计和逻辑条件回归。研究结果我们确定了 23,093 例小于 18 岁的儿童意外伤害住院病例,并提供了完整的街区组和暴露数据。大多数住院治疗发生在城市地区(90%),而农村地区比城市地区更容易发生停电。在非纽约市的城市地区,停电时间≥4 小时时,当≥50% 的用户停电时,全因意外伤害住院几率增加 30%。按伤害亚型进行的分析表明,随着受影响用户比例的增加,点估计值也在增加。但是,这些结果的置信区间较宽。结论:在纽约的农村地区、非纽约市的城市地区和纽约市地区,停电风险有很大差异。特别是在停电阈值最高时,我们观察到儿科意外伤害住院风险增加。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Power outages and pediatric unintentional injury hospitalizations in New York State
Background: In the past decade, electrical power disruptions (outages) have increased in the United States, especially those attributable to weather events. These outages have a range of health impacts but are largely unstudied in children. Here, we investigated the association between outages and unintentional injury hospitalizations, a leading cause of childhood morbidity. Methods: The study setting was New York State (NYS) from 2017 to 2020. Outage exposure was defined as ≥10%, ≥20%, and ≥50% of customers from a power operating locality without power, ascertained from NYS Department of Public Service records and stratified by rural, urban non-New York City (NYC), and NYC regions. Outcome daily block group-level pediatric injury hospitalization data was from the Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System (SPARCS). We leveraged a case-crossover study design with logistic conditional regression. Results: We identified 23,093 unintentional injury hospitalizations in children <18 years with complete block group and exposure data. Most hospitalizations occurred in urban regions (90%), whereas outages were more likely in rural than urban areas. In urban non-NYC regions, outages ≥4 hours were associated with 30% increased odds of all-cause unintentional injury hospitalizations when ≥50% of customers were without power. Analyses by injury subtype revealed increasing point estimates as the proportion of customers exposed increased. These results, however, had wide confidence intervals. Conclusions: Outage exposure differed significantly across rural, urban non-NYC, and NYC regions across New York. Especially at the highest outage threshold, we observed an increased risk of pediatric unintentional injury hospitalizations.
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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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