使用可穿戴设备评估肯尼亚西部农村人口的热暴露和健康结果:观察性案例研究。

IF 5.4 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES JMIR mHealth and uHealth Pub Date : 2024-07-04 DOI:10.2196/54669
Ina Matzke, Sophie Huhn, Mara Koch, Martina Anna Maggioni, Stephen Munga, Julius Okoth Muma, Collins Ochieng Odhiambo, Daniel Kwaro, David Obor, Till Bärnighausen, Peter Dambach, Sandra Barteit
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:气候变化对健康的影响越来越大,尤其是撒哈拉以南非洲的农村人口,因为他们用于适应气候变化的资源有限。了解这些影响仍是一项挑战,因为对这些人群生命体征的连续监测十分有限。可穿戴设备(可穿戴设备)为实时研究这些变化对人类健康的影响提供了一种可行的方法:本研究旨在评估消费级可穿戴设备在测量天气暴露对肯尼亚西部农村人口生理反应(包括活动、心率、体表温度和睡眠)的健康影响方面的可行性和有效性,并确定与天气暴露相关的健康影响:我们在肯尼亚西部开展了一项观察性案例研究,利用可穿戴设备在 3 周内持续监测各种健康指标,如步数、睡眠模式、心率和体表温度。此外,当地的气象站提供了降雨和高温等环境条件的详细数据,每 15 分钟测量一次:我们的团队由 83 名参与者组成(42 名女性和 41 名男性),平均年龄为 33 岁。我们观察到步数与最大湿球温度之间存在正相关(估计值 0.06,SE 0.02;P=.008)。虽然夜间最低温度和热指数与睡眠时间呈负相关,但在统计学上并不显著。在其他应用模型中也没有发现明显的相关性。在 204 天中,有 194 天(95.1%)的热指数达到警戒水平。在 204 天中,有 16 天(7.8%)出现暴雨(>20 毫米/天)。尽管 47 台设备中有 10 台(21%)出现故障,但睡眠和步数数据的完整率较高(分别为平均 82.6%,标准差 21.3% 和平均 86.1%,标准差 18.9%),而心率数据的完整率较低(平均 7%,标准差 14%),其中成年女性心率数据的完整率明显高于男性(双侧 t 检验:P=.003;曼-惠特尼 U 检验:P=.001)。体表温度数据的完整率为 36.2%(标准差为 24.5%):我们的研究让人们对肯尼亚农村地区天气暴露对健康的影响有了细致的了解。我们的研究应用可穿戴设备揭示了体力活动水平与高温压力之间的显著相关性,这与其他研究表明在较热条件下活动减少形成了鲜明对比。这种差异需要进一步研究其独特的社会环境动态,尤其是在撒哈拉以南非洲地区。此外,考虑到睡眠对健康的重要作用,在高温对睡眠的干扰方面观察到的非显著趋势表明,需要制定本地化的气候变化减缓战略。这些发现强调,在容易受到气候变化对健康的不利影响的地区,需要针对具体情况开展研究,为政策和实践提供信息。
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Assessment of Heat Exposure and Health Outcomes in Rural Populations of Western Kenya by Using Wearable Devices: Observational Case Study.

Background: Climate change increasingly impacts health, particularly of rural populations in sub-Saharan Africa due to their limited resources for adaptation. Understanding these impacts remains a challenge, as continuous monitoring of vital signs in such populations is limited. Wearable devices (wearables) present a viable approach to studying these impacts on human health in real time.

Objective: The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility and effectiveness of consumer-grade wearables in measuring the health impacts of weather exposure on physiological responses (including activity, heart rate, body shell temperature, and sleep) of rural populations in western Kenya and to identify the health impacts associated with the weather exposures.

Methods: We conducted an observational case study in western Kenya by utilizing wearables over a 3-week period to continuously monitor various health metrics such as step count, sleep patterns, heart rate, and body shell temperature. Additionally, a local weather station provided detailed data on environmental conditions such as rainfall and heat, with measurements taken every 15 minutes.

Results: Our cohort comprised 83 participants (42 women and 41 men), with an average age of 33 years. We observed a positive correlation between step count and maximum wet bulb globe temperature (estimate 0.06, SE 0.02; P=.008). Although there was a negative correlation between minimum nighttime temperatures and heat index with sleep duration, these were not statistically significant. No significant correlations were found in other applied models. A cautionary heat index level was recorded on 194 (95.1%) of 204 days. Heavy rainfall (>20 mm/day) occurred on 16 (7.8%) out of 204 days. Despite 10 (21%) out of 47 devices failing, data completeness was high for sleep and step count (mean 82.6%, SD 21.3% and mean 86.1%, SD 18.9%, respectively), but low for heart rate (mean 7%, SD 14%), with adult women showing significantly higher data completeness for heart rate than men (2-sided t test: P=.003; Mann-Whitney U test: P=.001). Body shell temperature data achieved 36.2% (SD 24.5%) completeness.

Conclusions: Our study provides a nuanced understanding of the health impacts of weather exposures in rural Kenya. Our study's application of wearables reveals a significant correlation between physical activity levels and high temperature stress, contrasting with other studies suggesting decreased activity in hotter conditions. This discrepancy invites further investigation into the unique socioenvironmental dynamics at play, particularly in sub-Saharan African contexts. Moreover, the nonsignificant trends observed in sleep disruption due to heat expose the need for localized climate change mitigation strategies, considering the vital role of sleep in health. These findings emphasize the need for context-specific research to inform policy and practice in regions susceptible to the adverse health effects of climate change.

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来源期刊
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
JMIR mHealth and uHealth Medicine-Health Informatics
CiteScore
12.60
自引率
4.00%
发文量
159
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: JMIR mHealth and uHealth (JMU, ISSN 2291-5222) is a spin-off journal of JMIR, the leading eHealth journal (Impact Factor 2016: 5.175). JMIR mHealth and uHealth is indexed in PubMed, PubMed Central, and Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE), and in June 2017 received a stunning inaugural Impact Factor of 4.636. The journal focusses on health and biomedical applications in mobile and tablet computing, pervasive and ubiquitous computing, wearable computing and domotics. JMIR mHealth and uHealth publishes since 2013 and was the first mhealth journal in Pubmed. It publishes even faster and has a broader scope with including papers which are more technical or more formative/developmental than what would be published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.
期刊最新文献
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