Power Outages: An Underappreciated Risk Factor for Children's Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

Alexander J Northrop, Vivian Do, Nina M Flores, Lauren Blair Wilner, Perry E Sheffield, Joan A Casey
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Abstract

Children's risk of exposure to carbon monoxide (CO) increases after disasters, likely due to improper generator use during power outages. Here, we evaluate the impact of outages on children's CO-related emergency department (ED) visits in New York State (NYS). We leveraged power outage data spanning 2017-2020 from the NYS Department of Public Service for 1,865 power operating localities (i.e., communities) and defined all-size and large-scale power outage hours. All-size outage hours affected ≥1% of customers, and large-scale outage hours affected ≥20%. We identified CO poisoning using diagnostic codes among those aged <18 between 2017 and 2020 using the Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System (SPARCS), an all-payer reporting system in NYS. We linked community power outage exposure to patients using the population-weighted centroid of their block group of residence. We estimated the impact of power outages on CO poisoning using a time-stratified case-crossover study design with conditional logistic regression, controlling for daily relative humidity, mean temperature, and total precipitation. Analyses were stratified by urban and rural communities. From 2017-2020, there were 917 pediatric CO poisoning ED visits in NYS. Most cases (83%) occurred in urban region of the state. We observed an association statewide between all-size and large-scale outages and CO ED visits on the index day and the following two days before a return to baseline on lag day 3. Four hours without power increased the odds of a pediatric CO poisoning ED visit by ≥50% for small-scale and ≥150% for large-scale outages, and associations were stronger in urban versus rural areas. While CO poisoning is a relatively rare cause of pediatric ED visits in NYS, it can be deadly and is also preventable. Expanded analyses of the health impacts of outages and advocacy for reliable energy access are needed to support children's health in a changing climate
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停电:儿童一氧化碳中毒的一个未被重视的风险因素
灾难发生后,儿童接触一氧化碳 (CO) 的风险会增加,这可能是由于停电期间发电机使用不当造成的。在此,我们评估了停电对纽约州(NYS)儿童一氧化碳相关急诊科(ED)就诊的影响。我们利用纽约州公共服务部提供的 1,865 个电力运行地区(即社区)的 2017-2020 年停电数据,定义了所有规模和大规模停电时间。所有规模的停电时间影响的用户≥1%,大规模停电时间影响的用户≥20%。我们利用纽约州的全州规划与研究合作系统 (SPARCS),通过诊断代码对 2017 年至 2020 年间年龄在 18 岁以上的人群进行了一氧化碳中毒鉴定。我们使用患者居住地街区组的人口加权中心点将社区停电风险与患者联系起来。我们采用条件逻辑回归的时间分层病例交叉研究设计来估算停电对一氧化碳中毒的影响,并对日相对湿度、平均气温和总降水量进行了控制。分析按城市和农村社区进行分层。2017-2020 年间,纽约州共有 917 例儿科 CO 中毒急诊就诊。大多数病例(83%)发生在该州的城市地区。我们在全州范围内观察到,在滞后的第 3 天恢复基线之前,所有规模和大规模停电与指数日及随后两天的 CO 急诊就诊之间存在关联。停电四小时后,小规模停电和大规模停电分别导致儿童一氧化碳中毒急诊就诊率增加了≥50%和≥150%,城市地区与农村地区的关联性更强。在纽约州,虽然一氧化碳中毒是儿科急诊就诊的一个相对罕见的原因,但它可能是致命的,也是可以预防的。需要扩大对停电对健康影响的分析,并倡导可靠的能源供应,以便在不断变化的气候中为儿童健康提供支持。
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