| Literature DB >> 26245846 |
Katherine E Bishop-Williams1, Olaf Berke2, David L Pearl3, David F Kelton4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Southern Ontario, climate change may have given rise to an increasing occurrence of heat waves since the year 2000, which can cause heat stress to the general public, and potentially have detrimental health consequences. Heat waves are defined as three consecutive days with temperatures of 32 °C and above. Heat stress is the level of discomfort. A variety of heat stress indices have been proposed to measure heat stress (e.g., the heat stress index (HSI)), and has been shown to predict increases in morbidity and/or mortality rates in humans and other species. Maps visualizing the distribution of heat stress can provide information about related health risks and insight for control strategies. Information to inform heat wave preparedness models in Ontario was previously only available for major metropolitan areas.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26245846 PMCID: PMC4527124 DOI: 10.1186/s12873-015-0043-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Fig. 1Location of meteorological stations in and around Southern Ontario which provide hourly interval data collection. Blue points represent the location of meteorological stations across Southern Ontario. Axes units are in meters
Dates of exposure and control periods
| Exposure Period | Control Period 1 (Preceding) | Control Period 2 (Following) |
|---|---|---|
| June 19–21, 2012 | May 29–31, 2012 | July 10–12, 2012 |
| July 20–22, 2011 | June 29–July 1, 2011 | Aug 17–19, 2011 |
| July 5–7, 2010 | June 14–16, 2010 | Aug 2–4, 2010 |
Fig. 2Location of 24 participating hospitals. Locations of 24 rural community hospitals in Southern Ontario which provided data for the number of emergency room visits per day for a study from 2010–2012 are marked with blue points. Axes units are in meters
Fig. 3Heat stress maps for Southern Ontario during each of the 3 heat waves and 6 control periods. Heat stress is represented on Isopleth maps where darkest colours (red) represent the most intense heat stress levels. Light colours represent the areas of least intense heat stress. Contour lines indicate the level of HSI reported in heat stress units. Each of the 24 hospital locations are marked in blue
Fig. 4Location of high risk cluster for heat related morbidity during all 3 heat waves. The area enclosed in the circle marks an area of increased risk of heat related morbidity resulting in emergency room visits (IRR = 3.8). The locations of 24 rural community hospitals in Southern Ontario are marked in blue. Axes are in meters
High risk cluster for increased emergency room visits during heat waves in rural Southern Ontario from 2010–2012
| Inside the Cluster | Total Area | |
|---|---|---|
| Population | 75,280 | 390,462 |
| Number of cases | 6,583 | 13,838 |
| Annual cases /100,000 | 8,726 | 3,537 |
| Observed / Expected | 2.47 | (ref) |
| Relative Risk (RR) | 3.8 | |
| Size (Radius) | 96 km | |
| P-value | <0.001 |