| Literature DB >> 20049116 |
Paul B English1, Amber H Sinclair, Zev Ross, Henry Anderson, Vicki Boothe, Christine Davis, Kristie Ebi, Betsy Kagey, Kristen Malecki, Rebecca Shultz, Erin Simms.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To develop public health adaptation strategies and to project the impacts of climate change on human health, indicators of vulnerability and preparedness along with accurate surveillance data on climate-sensitive health outcomes are needed. We researched and developed environmental health indicators for inputs into human health vulnerability assessments for climate change and to propose public health preventative actions. DATA SOURCES: We conducted a review of the scientific literature to identify outcomes and actions that were related to climate change. Data sources included governmental and nongovernmental agencies and the published literature. DATA EXTRACTION: Sources were identified and assessed for completeness, usability, and accuracy. Priority was then given to identifying longitudinal data sets that were applicable at the state and community level. DATA SYNTHESIS: We present a list of surveillance indicators for practitioners and policy makers that include climate-sensitive health outcomes and environmental and vulnerability indicators, as well as mitigation, adaptation, and policy indicators of climate change.Entities:
Keywords: adaptation; air quality; climate change; environmental health; heat; indicators; vulnerability
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20049116 PMCID: PMC2801164 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.0900708
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Proposed environmental health indicators for climate change.
| Indicator | Data source | Years available | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Environmental indicators | |||
| GHGEs | 1990–2005 | Lists emissions from fossil fuels only | |
| Stagnation air mass events | 1948–present | Not applicable | |
| O3 estimates due to climate change | NA | Based on modeling | |
| Maximum and minimum temperatures, heat index | 1900–present | Temperature monitors not always present in population centers | |
| Increase in heat alerts/warnings | 1993–present | Data completeness and accuracy questionable | |
| Pollen counts, ragweed presence | Varies by source | Limited number of pollen-monitoring stations (only 78 report to the National Allergy Bureau) | |
| Frequency, severity, distribution, and duration of wildfires | 1960–2007 | Not applicable | |
| Droughts: SPI, SWSI | 1901–present | Need to analyze precipitation data available from NCDC | |
| HABs: human shellfish poisonings, HAB outbreak monitoring in freshwater and ocean waters | Specific states: | Ongoing | Shellfish poisonings are underreported and misdiagnosed; there is limited monitoring of freshwater HAB outbreaks |
| Morbidity and mortality indicators | |||
| Excess mortality due to extreme heat | 1968–2005 | Not applicable | |
| Excess morbidity due to extreme heat | AHRQ HCUPnet hospitalization data availability vary for 30 states between 1997 and 2006, and ED data are available for seven states for 2005 | Coverage only for low-income and Medicaid files, and elderly in Medicare; AHRQ files not complete for all states; BioSense has limited coverage of participating facilities | |
| No. of injuries/mortality from extreme weather events | CRED, 1900–present; NCDC, 1993–present; NCHS, 1968–2005 | Underreporting and inconsistencies in reporting in U.S. data sources | |
| Human cases of environmental infectious disease/positive test results in reservoirs/sentinels/vectors | West Nile virus, 1999–present; Lyme disease, 1992–present | Limited data on range of vector for Lyme disease | |
| Respiratory/allergic disease and mortality related to increased air pollution and pollens | NA | Based on modeling | |
| Vulnerability indicators | |||
| Elderly living alone, poverty status, children, infants, and individuals with disabilities | 1960–2000 (U.S. Census); 1984–present (BRFSS) | Needs to be coupled with heat exposure data | |
| Flooding vulnerability (elderly, those in poverty, infants, and disabled living in 100- and 500-year flood zones) | 1960–2000 (U.S. Census) | Flood plain maps are undergoing digital revisions | |
| Sea level rise vulnerability (population by county within 5 km of coast with “very high” vulnerability to sea level rise) | NA | NA | |
| Mitigation indicators | |||
| Energy efficiencies | Department of Energy 2009 | 1978–2001 | NA |
| Use of renewable energy | Department of Energy 2009 | 2002–2006 | |
| No. of vehicle miles traveled | Department of Energy 2009 | 1983–1993 | |
| Adaptation indicators | |||
| Access to cooling centers | Surveys (no surveys are currently available) | NA | NA |
| No. of heat wave early warning systems | Surveys | NA | |
| No. of municipal heat island mitigation plans | Surveys | NA | |
| No. of health surveillance systems related to climate change | Surveys | NA | NA |
| Public health workforce available/trained in climate change research/surveillance/adaptation | Surveys | NA | NA |
| Policy indicators | |||
| No. of cities/municipalities covered by Kyoto protocol | NA | NA | |
| No. of states/cities participating in climate change initiatives | NA | NA | |
Abbreviations: AHRQ, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; BRFSS, Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System; CRED, Centre for Research in the Epidemiology of Disasters; FEMA, Federal Emergency Management Agency; ICLEI, International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives; NA, not applicable; SPI; standardized precipitation index; SWSI, surface water supply index; USGS, U.S. Geological Survey. Data from the State Environmental Health Indicators Collaborative, Council for State and Territorial Epidemiologists (unpublished data).
Figure 1Population by U.S. county within 5 km of the coast with “very high” vulnerability to sea level rise. Data from the USGS (2000) and U.S. Census (2000).