| Literature DB >> 31349585 |
Ana Casanueva1,2, Annkatrin Burgstall3, Sven Kotlarski3, Alessandro Messeri4,5, Marco Morabito4,6, Andreas D Flouris7, Lars Nybo8, Christoph Spirig3, Cornelia Schwierz3.
Abstract
The frequency of extreme heat events, such as the summer of 2003 in Europe, and their corresponding consequences for human beings are expected to increase under a warmer climate. The joint collaboration of institutional agencies and multidisciplinary approaches is essential for a successful development of heat-health warning systems and action plans which can reduce the impacts of extreme heat on the population. The present work constitutes a state-of-the-art review of 16 European heat-health warning systems and heat-health action plans, based on the existing literature, web search (over the National Meteorological Services websites) and questionnaires. The aim of this study is to pave the way for future heat-health warning systems, such as the one currently under development in the framework of the Horizon 2020 HEAT-SHIELD project. Some aspects are highlighted among the variety of examined European warning systems. The meteorological variables that trigger the warnings should present a clear link with the impact under consideration and should be chosen depending on the purpose and target of the warnings. Setting long-term planning actions as well as pre-alert levels might prevent and reduce damages due to heat. Finally, education and communication are key elements of the success of a warning system.Entities:
Keywords: action plan; heat stress; heat-health warning system; intervention strategy; user-tailored
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31349585 PMCID: PMC6695887 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16152657
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Characteristics of the weather forecast system in European countries. The identifier (ID) for each country is used as reference also in Table 2, Table 3 and Table 4.
| ID | Country | Provider, Institution | Model System | Spatial Resolution | Temporal Resolution | Lead Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AU | Austria | Zentralanstalt für Meteorologie und Geodynamik (ZAMG) | INCA (1 km), ALARO (5 km), ECMWF ENS (15 km) | Regional | Several times a day | 6 h (INCA), 72 h (ALARO) |
| BE | Belgium | Royal Meteorological Institute of Belgium (RMI) | ALADIN (deterministic) + RMI EPS (probabilistic, based on AROME and ALARO, 2.5 km) | Provinces | Several times a day | 12–48 h, depending on the warning level |
| EN | England | Met Office and Public Health England (PHE) | Deterministic UK (UKV, 1.5 km) + Ensemble UK (MOGREPS-UK, 2.2 km) | Regional and local | Several times a day | 120 h (UKV) to 5 days (MOGREPS-UK) |
| FR | France | MeteoFrance and Santé Publique France | AROME (1.3 km) + ARPEGE (16 km), deterministic | Regional | Twice a day (6 and 18 h) | 36 h (AROME), 4 days (ARPEGE) |
| DE | Germany | German Weather Service (DWD) | MOSMIX (optimizes and interprets the forecasts of ICON-DWD and IFS-ECMWF) | County level | Daily | 2 days (8 days for pre-information) |
| GR | Greece | Hellenic National Meteorological Service (HNMS) | ECMWF deterministic and ENS model | Regional (16 regions) | Several times a day | 3 days |
| HU | Hungary | Hungarian Meteorological Service (HMS) and National Public Health and Medical Officer Service (ANTSZ) | ECMWF and GFS, both with deterministic and probabilistic versions | Minimum unit is county level | Four times a day | 4 days to the public, 8 days to the authorities |
| IT | Italy (HHWS Rome) | Servizio Meteorologico Aeronautica Militare (Italian Meteorological Service), Lazio Health Authority and Department of Epidemiology | COSMO deterministic (5 and 2.2 km, depending on the domain) + COSMO-EPS (probabilistic, 7 and 2.2 km) | Regional capitals and cities with more than 250,000 inhabitants (27 cities) | Several times a day | 48–72 h, depending on domain size |
| NE | Netherlands | National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM) and Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI) | HIRLAM + HARMONIE (2.5 km) + ECMWF ENS (9 km) | Regional | Several times a day | 6 days |
| NM | North Macedonia | Macedonian Meteorology | - | National and regional | - | 2 days |
| PT | Portugal (HHWS Lisbon) | Portuguese Meteorological Institute, Portuguese National Institute of Health, Portuguese General Health Directorate and Portuguese Civil Protection Service | ALADIN (12 km) | Regional and specific for Lisbon | Daily | 3 days |
| RO | Romania | Public Health Ministry and Meteo Romania | - | - | - | 2 days |
| SL | Slovenia | Slovenian Environment Agency (ARSO) | ECMWF incl. MOS and ensembles + ALADIN | 5 regions—approximately 4000 km2 each | Daily | 5 days |
| SP | Spain | National Plan joining several institutions (e.g., National Meteorological Agency AEMET, Health Ministry) | HARMONIE-AROME (deterministic) + IFS-ECMWF (probabilistic, longer lead times) | Regions and provinces | Several times a day (9, 11:30 and 23 h) | 3 days (HARMONY-AROME), 5 days (IFS-ECMWF) |
| SW | Sweden | Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (SMHI) | HARMONIE-AROME (0–48h, deterministic + probabilistic with 9 members) + ECMWF (longer lead times, deterministic and ENS) | 40 warning districts of variable size. The warning is limited, if necessary, to a smaller part of the district | Every morning. Rather often updates in the afternoon or in the evening, considering the latest run of the model and observed temperatures. | 3–5 days ahead depending on the warning criterion |
| CH | Switzerland | Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology (MeteoSwiss) | COSMO CLM deterministic + MOSMIX + ENS ECMWF (longer lead times) | Regional | At least once a day. Updates if necessary. | COSMO 3 days, ENS ECMWF 5 days |
INCA: Integrated Nowcasting Through Comprehensive Analysis. ALARO: ALadin–AROme. ALADIN: Aire Limitée Adaptation Dynamique Développement Internationa. AROME: Application of Research to Operations at Mesoscale. IFS: Integrated Forecast System. ECMWF: European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts. ENS: ensemble. GFS: Global Forecast System. Table cells with “-” mean missing information.
Characteristics of the heat-health action plans.
| ID | Component ofa HHAP (Yes/No) | If Component of a HAP, Intervention Strategies | Evaluation and Revision |
|---|---|---|---|
| AU | Yes | Level 0—Long-term development and planning for the summer: Elaboration and updating of information material and ensure information flow with stakeholders and other administrations. | Irregularly |
| BE | Yes | Public cooling areas, phone hotline. - | |
| EN | Yes | From long-term planning for severe heat, through summer and heatwave preparedness, to a major national emergency. | Annually |
| FR | Yes | Upscale hotline staff. | Annually |
| DE | Yes, in some federal states of Germany | Depending on the federal states of Germany. Overall phone hotline and information campaign. | Annually |
| GR | General Secretariat for Civil Protection responsible for actions | - | No |
| HU | Yes | Forecasted heat wave: info to health care system and general public. | - |
| IT | Yes | Active monitoring of vulnerable groups by GPs, social workers, volunteers (phone calls & home visits by GPs). | - |
| NE | Yes | Several organizations warn their target groups and regional contacts. | Regular meetings to discuss the method of the heat plan and the effects |
| NM | Yes | Monitoring, information provided to retirement homes and GPs, installation or maintenance of public drinking fountains & springs, education to public. | Annually |
| PT | Yes | Public health emergency telephone used as hotline and reinforced with nursing personnel. | In specific, extreme years. |
| RO | Yes | Monitoring and general advice to public and health institutions. | - |
| SL | No | - | - |
| SP | Yes | Levels 0, 1: information (media, social services, institutions) and monitoring. | At least once a year |
| SW | The SMHI is only in charge of the heat warnings, not the actions. | It is up to each county to develop strategies. | All class 2 warnings are evaluated. The whole warning system will be revised in the next few years with the introduction of impact-based warnings and flexible warning districts. |
| CH | Yes, cantonal heat plans | The strategies depend on the cantonal authorities. For instance, in Ticino: | Feedback from cantons after each warning and annual warnings’ conference. |
GPs: general practitioners.
Communication strategies of the heat warnings.
| ID | Language | Notification System to Target Groups | Notification System to Stakeholders | Source | Website |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AU | German | Website | Internally, all warnings above a certain category are subject to a certified process, which determines which bodies have to be informed and in which form. | [ |
|
| BE | Belgian | Website | - |
|
|
| EN | English | Media, website, emails, social media, leaflet (via pharmacies, GPs, national health system, advice centres, hospitals, care homes) | Email-Newsletter | [ |
|
| FR | French | Communicated to the media and the general population by MétéoFrance through a vigilance map | - | [ |
|
| DE | German | Email-Newsletter, website, Apps, radio, internet, newspaper, television | Email-Newsletter | [ |
|
| GR | Greek | Website, twitter | The Ministry of Health issues the notifications to all the stakeholders. | - |
|
| HU | Hungarian and English, via web and Meteoalarm | Website, mobile app (Meteora) | E-mails to the National Public Health and Medical Officer Service | [ |
|
| IT | Italian | City-specific warning bulletins are distributed at both national and local level and published online.Information through national/local help-lines and via the media. Diffusion of warnings via the media, Ministry of Health/Civil Protection websites. | Warning bulletins published daily on the website and sent to stakeholders. Flyers in centres for elderly and public places, local pharmacies health centres and GPs. | [ |
|
| NE | Dutch | Letters, media (press release), emails etc. | Public health services, trade associations and the Dutch Red Cross warn their supporters and regional contacts.Practical information on measures in the toolkit ‘Hitte’ (‘heat’). It contains: list of questions and answers, public brochure, sample letters, press announcement, text of the National Heat Plan. It is aimed at environmental health experts, environmental nurses, medical environmentalists, communication staff, etc. |
|
|
| NM | Macedonian | - | - | [ |
|
| PT | Portuguese | - | - | [ |
|
| RO | Romanian | - | Daily information to health ministry and health authorities. | [ |
|
| SL | Slovene | ARSO web pages, Twitter, Facebook, radio, TV | Website, Twitter, Facebook, radio, TV. Civil defense by E-mail. |
| |
| SP | Spanish (and CAP in English) | Website (maps, bulletins and CAP), social media (especially Twitter), Open Data server for further analyses. | Direct/automatic distribution to public bodies. CAP and bulletins. |
|
|
| SW | Swedish and English | Authorities and institutions in the health sector and in the elderly care can register to receive emails when heat warnings are issued. | Stakeholders are notified by email, via mobile application, website, social media and/or via early warning telephone conference. | - |
|
| CH | German/French/Italian and the SMS also inEnglish. | MeteoSwiss app and website.Postal code subscription via app for receiving region-specific warnings. | The dissemination of the warning message to the stakeholders (hospitals, retirement homes, etc...) is handled differently depending on the region. In Ticino and French-speaking Switzerland, some heat products are sent daily in summer (forecasts of Tmax, Tmin). |
|
|
GPs: general practitioners. CAP: common alerting protocol.
Characteristics of the warning system.
| ID | Heat index | Warning thresholds/alerts levels | Nature of the warning thresholds | Target groups |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AU | Perceived Temperature (PT) and Tmin | PT > 35 °C for at least 3 days without night cooling below 20 °C | Threshold from epidemiological studies (based on thermophysiological strain) in Germany by DWD adapted to Austria. | Nursing facilities, hospitals and health resorts, childcare facilities (kindergartens, schools, etc.), mobile nursing services, medical chambers and emergency organizations |
| BE | Tmax, Tmin, Tcumul | Green: No warning, all indices below thresholds. | - | Belgium Interregional Environment Agency (IR-CEL), authorities |
| EN | Tmax and Tmin | Region-specific (for Tmax and Tmin). | Epidemiological (15–20% increased risk of mortality) | National Health Service, local authorities, social care, other public agencies, professionals working with people at risk, individuals, local communities, voluntary groups. |
| FR | Combination of Tmin and Tmax averaged over three days (BMI) | 3 days mean of Tmax > regionally dependent thresholds | Biometeorological | Local authorities, Santé Publique France |
| DE | PT and Tmin | Thresholds are region-specific and consider acclimatization (previous 30 days). Benchmark: | Epidemiological research, based on thermophysiological strain | General public, health system, elderly, people living socially isolated, people needing care, obese persons, chronically ill, working people outdoors, homeless, babies and infants. |
| GR | Tmax and heat index | a. For Tmax over the northern Greek regions: | Climatological percentiles and the respective literature | General Public. Other target groups are managed by the Ministry of Health |
| HU | Tmean | Yellow: 25 °C > Tmean > 27 °C | Epidemiological, link to mortality | National Public Health and Medical Officer Service |
| IT | Tappmax and “air mass-based approach” in larger cities | City-specific | Epidemiological, related to excess of mortality | Ministry of Health, local health authorities, local civil protection, stakeholders (hospitals, retirement homes etc.) GPs, health resorts, media, registered individuals |
| NE | Tmax | more than 10% probability of 4 or more days with | Practical: not too many warnings in a year | Elderly, people in care institutions, and chronically ill and overweight people. Public health services, trade associations and the Dutch Red Cross |
| NM | Tmax | Monthly thresholds for each of the 4 phases for 13 cities in 6 regions from May to September | - | Retirement homes, GPs, workers. |
| PT | For heat wave definition: TemperatureFor alert levels: ÍCARO index | Heat wave: Temperature > 32 °C for at least 2 days | Epidemiological | Portuguese National Institute of Health, the Portuguese Meteorological Institute, Portuguese General Health Directorate and the Portuguese Civil Protection Service |
| RO | Tmax | Alert: Tmax 35–38 °C, Maximum response: Tmax 35–40 °C | - | - |
| SL | Tmean and Tmax | Yellow: Tmax > 31 °C | Climatology-based percentiles | Public (general population), civil defense in case of orange or red warning |
| SP | Heat wave: TmaxHHAP: Tmax and Tmin | Heat wave: At least 3 days with at least 10% of stations in the region with Tmax > 95th percentile. Warnings for single-day events (yellow | orange | red corresponding to different Tmax for each region: North 34 | 37 | 40; Center and Med. 36 | 39 | 42; South 38 | 40 | 44). | Heat wave: Climatological percentiles for each region. | General population, Civil Protection, Maritime Rescue Centers, Department of Traffic, Military Unit for Emergencies, Red Cross, other Met Services, government and ministries, media. |
| SW | Tmax | Heat warning class 1: Tmax ≥ 30 °C for 3 or 4 days | Epidemiological, based on the relation between temperature and rate of mortality. | General public and health providers as hospitals, elderly care etc. |
| CH | Heat index | Level 3 (orange): at least 3 days with HI > 90 | - | Construction industry, the trade unions (e.g., UNIA) and cantonal authorities |
Tmax: daily maximum temperature. Tmin: daily minimum temperature. Tcumul: the sum of the difference between Tmax and 25 °C for the 5 coming days (only the positive values are taken into account). PT: perceived temperature (combination of temperature, radiation, wind, humidity). BMI: Bio Meteorological Indicator. Tappmax: maximum apparent temperature. GPs: general practitioners. ÍCARO index: (number of expected deaths with the effect of heat (Yt)/number of expected deaths without the effect of heat). HI: heat index.