Exploring neighborhood racial and socioeconomic heterogeneity in the short-term effects of air pollution and extreme heat on medical emergencies

Karl Vachuska
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Abstract

Introduction

As climate change continues to affect society, understanding how adverse climatic conditions impact different communities differently is essential to equitable climate change mitigation. While research has identified the potential for climate change to impact public health in terms of air quality and extreme heat, less research has explored inequality regarding how these events impact public health. This paper explores inequality in the effects of climatic events on short-term health based on air pollution and severe heat.

Methods

Using two-way fixed-effects models, racial and socioeconomic heterogeneity in the effects of air pollution and extreme heat on the incidence of medical emergencies are examined.

Results

Results suggest that poor air quality predominantly affects the incidence of medical emergencies in poor, non-White neighborhoods and has minimal effects in affluent White neighborhoods. Neighborhoods with more impoverished residents experience more medical emergencies on days with extreme heat.

Conclusion

Overall, the results suggest that extreme heat has substantial effects on medical emergencies, but there is little racial heterogeneity in these effects. Notably, the results provide little evidence of an interaction effect between poor air quality and extreme heat. The results show the need for climate change mitigation strategies that are equitable for all communities.
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导言:随着气候变化对社会的持续影响,了解不利的气候条件如何对不同社区产生不同影响,对于公平减缓气候变化至关重要。虽然研究发现气候变化可能在空气质量和极端高温方面影响公众健康,但较少研究探讨这些事件如何影响公众健康的不平等问题。本文以空气污染和酷热为基础,探讨了气候事件对短期健康影响的不平等性。方法利用双向固定效应模型,研究了空气污染和酷热对医疗急救发生率影响的种族和社会经济异质性。结果结果表明,空气质量差主要影响贫穷的非白人社区的医疗急救发生率,而对富裕的白人社区影响甚微。结论总体而言,研究结果表明,酷热对医疗急救事件有很大影响,但这些影响几乎不存在种族异质性。值得注意的是,研究结果几乎没有证明空气质量差与极端高温之间存在交互影响。这些结果表明,需要制定对所有社区都公平的气候变化减缓战略。
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来源期刊
The journal of climate change and health
The journal of climate change and health Global and Planetary Change, Public Health and Health Policy
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
68 days
期刊最新文献
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