R. Parks

The Earth Institute, Columbia University

Author Of 2 Presentations

Coastal storms, hurricanes and multiple hospitalization outcomes in the United States (ID 654)

Date
08/24/2020
Room
Hall C
Lecture Time
03:05 PM - 03:17 PM
Presenter

P-0410 - Anomalously warm temperatures are associated with increased injury deaths (ID 2280)

Date
08/24/2020
Room
Not Assigned
Session Name
E-POSTER GALLERY (ID 409)
Lecture Time
02:40 AM - 03:00 AM
Presenter

Presenter of 2 Presentations

Coastal storms, hurricanes and multiple hospitalization outcomes in the United States (ID 654)

Date
08/24/2020
Room
Hall C
Lecture Time
03:05 PM - 03:17 PM
Presenter

P-0410 - Anomalously warm temperatures are associated with increased injury deaths (ID 2280)

Date
08/24/2020
Room
Not Assigned
Session Name
E-POSTER GALLERY (ID 409)
Lecture Time
02:40 AM - 03:00 AM
Presenter

Poster Author Of 1 e-Poster

E-POSTER GALLERY (ID 409)

P-0410 - Anomalously warm temperatures are associated with increased injury deaths

Abstract Control Number
2901
Abstract Body
Temperatures that deviate from the long-term local norm affect human health, and are projected to become more frequent as the global climate changes. There are limited data on how such anomalies affect deaths from injuries. In the present study, we used data on mortality and temperature over 38 years (1980-2017) in the contiguous USA and formulated a Bayesian spatio-temporal model to quantify how anomalous temperatures, defined as deviations of monthly temperature from the local average monthly temperature over the entire analysis period, affect deaths from unintentional (transport, falls and drownings) and intentional (assault and suicide) injuries, by age group and sex. We found that a 1.5 °C anomalously warm year, as envisioned under the Paris Climate Agreement, would be associated with an estimated 1,601 (95% credible interval 1,430-1,776) additional injury deaths. Of these additional deaths, 84% would occur in males, mostly in adolescence to middle age. These would comprise increases in deaths from drownings, transport, assault and suicide, offset partly by a decline in deaths from falls in older ages. The findings demonstrate the need for targeted interventions against injuries during periods of anomalously warm temperatures, especially as these episodes are likely to increase with global climate change.