Examining the Heat Health Burden in Australia: A Rapid Review

IF 3 Q2 METEOROLOGY & ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES Climate Pub Date : 2023-12-18 DOI:10.3390/cli11120246
Manoj Bhatta, Emma Field, Max Cass, K. Zander, Steven Guthridge, Matt Brearley, Sonia Hines, Gavin Pereira, Darfiana Nur, A.B. Chang, Gurmeet Singh, Stefan Trueck, Chi Truong, John Wakerman, Supriya Mathew
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Abstract

Extreme heat has been linked to increased mortality and morbidity across the globe. Increasing temperatures due to climatic change will place immense stress on healthcare systems. This review synthesises Australian literature that has examined the effect of hot weather and heatwaves on various health outcomes. Databases including Web of Science, PubMed and CINAHL were systematically searched for articles that quantitatively examined heat health effects for the Australian population. Relevant, peer-reviewed articles published between 2010 and 2023 were included. Two authors screened the abstracts. One researcher conducted the full article review and data extraction, while another researcher randomly reviewed 10% of the articles to validate decisions. Our rapid review found abundant literature indicating increased mortality and morbidity risks due to extreme temperature exposures. The effect of heat on mortality was found to be mostly immediate, with peaks in the risk of death observed on the day of exposure or the next day. Most studies in this review were concentrated on cities and mainly included health outcome data from temperate and subtropical climate zones. There was a dearth of studies that focused on tropical or arid climates and at-risk populations, including children, pregnant women, Indigenous people and rural and remote residents. The review highlights the need for more context-specific studies targeting vulnerable population groups, particularly residents of rural and remote Australia, as these regions substantially vary climatically and socio-demographically from urban Australia, and the heat health impacts are likely to be even more substantial.
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研究澳大利亚的高温健康负担:快速审查
极端高温与全球死亡率和发病率的上升有关。气候变化导致的气温升高将给医疗保健系统带来巨大压力。本综述综述了澳大利亚有关炎热天气和热浪对各种健康结果影响的文献。我们在科学网、PubMed 和 CINAHL 等数据库中系统地搜索了定量研究高温对澳大利亚人口健康影响的文章。其中包括 2010 年至 2023 年间发表的经同行评审的相关文章。两位作者对摘要进行了筛选。一位研究人员对文章进行了全文审阅和数据提取,另一位研究人员随机审阅了 10% 的文章,以验证决定。我们的快速综述发现有大量文献表明,暴露在极端温度下会增加死亡率和发病率风险。研究发现,高温对死亡率的影响大多是立竿见影的,暴露当天或第二天就会出现死亡风险高峰。本综述中的大多数研究都集中在城市,主要包括来自温带和亚热带气候区的健康结果数据。关注热带或干旱气候和高危人群(包括儿童、孕妇、土著居民以及农村和偏远地区居民)的研究很少。审查强调,需要针对弱势群体,特别是澳大利亚农村和偏远地区的居民开展更多有针对性的研究,因为这些地区在气候和社会人口方面与澳大利亚城市地区存在很大差异,高温对健康的影响可能会更大。
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来源期刊
Climate
Climate Earth and Planetary Sciences-Atmospheric Science
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
5.40%
发文量
172
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: Climate is an independent, international and multi-disciplinary open access journal focusing on climate processes of the earth, covering all scales and involving modelling and observation methods. The scope of Climate includes: Global climate Regional climate Urban climate Multiscale climate Polar climate Tropical climate Climate downscaling Climate process and sensitivity studies Climate dynamics Climate variability (Interseasonal, interannual to decadal) Feedbacks between local, regional, and global climate change Anthropogenic climate change Climate and monsoon Cloud and precipitation predictions Past, present, and projected climate change Hydroclimate.
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