| Literature DB >> 21761264 |
Emily Ying Yang Chan1, William B Goggins, Jacqueline Jakyoung Kim, Sian Griffiths, Timothy K W Ma.
Abstract
The negative impact of extreme temperatures on health is well-established. Individual help-seeking behavior, however, may mitigate the extent of morbidity and mortality during elevated temperatures. This study examines individual help-seeking behavior during periods of elevated temperatures among a Chinese population. Help-seeking patterns and factors that influence behavior will be identified so that vulnerable subgroups may be targeted for health protection during heat crises. A retrospective time-series Poisson generalized additive model analysis, using meteorological data of Hong Kong Observatory and routine emergency help call data from The Hong Kong Senior Citizen Home Safety Association during warm seasons (June-September) 1998-2007, was conducted. A "U"-shaped association was found between daily emergency calls and daily temperature. About 49% of calls were for explicit health-related reasons including dizziness, shortness of breath, and general pain. The associate with maximum temperature was statistically significant (p = 0.034) with the threshold temperature at which the frequency of health-related calls started to increase being around 30-32°C. Mean daily relative humidity (RH) also had a significant U-shaped association with daily emergency health-related calls with call frequency beginning to increase with RH greater than 70-74% (10-25% of the RH distribution). Call frequency among females appeared to be more sensitive to high temperatures, with a threshold between 28.5°C and 30.5°C while calls among males were more sensitive to cold temperatures (threshold 31.5-33.5°C). Results indicate differences in community help-seeking behavior at elevated temperatures. Potential programs or community outreach services might be developed to protect vulnerable subgroups from the adverse impact of elevated temperatures.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21761264 PMCID: PMC3157502 DOI: 10.1007/s11524-011-9599-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Urban Health ISSN: 1099-3460 Impact factor: 3.671
Summary statistics, June–September 1998–2006, Hong Kong
| Descriptive variables | ||
|---|---|---|
| Daily meteorological | Mean (°C) | Range (°C) |
| Mean temperature | 28.4 | 22.2, 31.8 |
| Minimum temperature | 26.5 | 20.7, 29.4 |
| Maximum temperature | 30.7 | 23.2, 35.4 |
| Dew point temperature | 24.5 | 12.2, 26.8 |
| Humidity | 80.4 | 39.0, 98.0 |
| Daily pollution | Mean (μg/m3) | Range (μg/m3) |
| NO2 | 43.3 | 9.8, 121.1 |
| O3 | 28.2 | 6.0, 108.5 |
| SO2 | 20.2 | 1.6, 103.0 |
| RSP | 37.2 | 13.5, 143.5 |
| Average weekly influenza ratea | Mean (per 1,000 consultation) | Range |
| GOPC | 5.5 | 1, 11.9 |
| GOP | 44.6 | 22.9, 86.8 |
| Daily calls | Total | Threshold max temperature (°C) |
| Total | 19,865 (100%) | 30–32 |
| Reason for call | ||
| Health-related | 10,917 (49%) | 29.5 |
| No reason | 2,536 (32%) | 29.4 |
| Other | 6,413 (19%) | 31.5 |
| Demographic breakdown for health-related calls | ||
| Age | ||
| <75 | 3,387 (31%) | 30–32 |
| 75+ | 7,525 (69%) | 30–32 |
| Gender | ||
| Female | 6,466 (58%) | 28.5–30.5 |
| Male | 4,451 (42%) | 31.5–33.5 |
| Area of residence | ||
| HKI | 1,722(16%) | 25 |
| KL | 4,781 (44%) | 35 |
| NT | 4,398 (40%) | 29–31 |
| Dependency status | ||
| Living alone | 5,434(50%) | 29–31 |
| Living with someone | 5,483 (50%) | 30–32 |
| Socioeconomic statusb (receiving government assistance CSSA) | ||
| Yes | 4,838 (44%) | 30–32 |
| No | 6,079 (56%) | 30–32 |
| Access to social network | ||
| Self-paid | 3,631 (33%) | 29–31 |
| Paid with assistance | 7,286 (67%) | 30.5–32.5 |
Study period covers 1,220 days during warm seasons June–September 1998–2006; 19,865 SCHSA members made emergency calls to the PE Link, of which 10,916 were for explicitly health-related reasons
GOPC general outpatient clinics, GOP general outpatient services
aWeekly influenza-like illnesses as reported for GOPC and GOP by the Hong Kong Centre for Health Promotion
bHong Kong government’s CSSA scheme provides supplemental income to people living below the poverty line in Hong Kong, thus representing poverty or low socioeconomic status
cTotals do not include missing or unknown
FIGURE 1All health-related calls (p values: maximum air temperature p = 0.034, mean relative humidity p = 0.011, SO2 p = 0.046. During the warm seasons between 1998 and 2007, 19,865 SCHSA members made emergency calls to the PE Link, of which 10,916 were for explicitly health-related reasons). Associations between weather and SO2 and daily numbers of health-related calls. Y-axis represents the centered standardized residuals when controlling for other variables in the model. Solid line represents the smoothed mean residuals across values of the X-axis variables which describes the basic shape of the association. Dashed lines represent 95% Bayesian credible intervals.
FIGURE 2Health-related calls by age (p values: age < 75, p = 0.21, age ≥ 75, p = 0.089).
FIGURE 3Health-related calls by gender (p values: male p = 0.013, female = 0.087).
FIGURE 4Health-related calls by area of residence (p value: HKI p = 0.26, Kowloon p = 0.0098, New Territories p = 0.036).
FIGURE 5Health-related calls by socioeconomic status (p value: receiving CSSA, p = 0.21; not receiving CSSA, p = 0.15. Hong Kong government’s CSSA scheme provides supplemental income to people living below the poverty line in Hong Kong, thus representing poverty or low socioeconomic status).
FIGURE 6Health-related calls by dependency status (p value: living alone p = 0.11, living with someone p = 0.13).
FIGURE 7Health-related calls by access to social network (p value: paid by network p = 0.14, self-paid p = 0.17. Membership payment (by a network/organization or self-paid) used as a proxy for access to social network).
FIGURE 8Association between daily maximum temperature and daily number of health-related calls: June–September 1998–2006 Hong Kong (line presents smoothed mean of number of calls).