Behind
the record breaking cold snap in North America and the terrible
floods in Britain (not to mention 'snow that won't melt), this is the reality.
Climate
change's heat—not cold—is the real killer
Chill
with impunity through this winter's extreme cold – and brace for
the next summer heat wave, when fiery temperatures and air pollution
conspire to fill hospitals and morgues.
Phys,
31
January, 2014
That's
the advice from a team of climate-change researchers who studied 170
million hospital admissions and 8 million deaths (season by season,
day by day, for 10 years) in Germany before issuing a report with
global implications.
"We
show that extreme heat events have a highly significant and largely
adverse impact on both hospitalizations and deaths, whereas extreme
cold seems to have a negligible real-world impact on population
health," said Nicolas Ziebarth, assistant professor of policy
analysis and management in Cornell's College of Human Ecology.
Ziebarth
published "The Short-term Population Health Effects of Weather
and Pollution: Implications of Climate Change" in the December
2013 Journal of Economic Literature with Maike Schmitt, Darmstadt
Technical University, and Martin Karlsson, University of
Duisburg-Essen. Ziebarth is also affiliated with the German Institute
for Economic Research and the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA).
The
researchers gathered a decade's worth (1999-2008) of health,
temperature and air-pollution data from a variety of sources –
including 1,044 weather stations and 1,314 air quality monitors
across Germany and all 17 million hospital admissions and 800,000
deaths that occur in Germany per year. They were particularly
interested in deaths from respiratory, infectious or metabolic causes
that might be linked to heat stress and pollution.
An
extreme "cold day," for study purposes, had temperatures
below 14 degrees F, and a "cold wave" was four days of such
temperatures. A "hot day" had temperatures above 86 degrees
F, and a "heat wave" was four consecutive hot days.
Severe
air pollution days had alert-level amounts of ozone, nitrate and
particulate matter in the air (according to EU standards, which have
much lower alert thresholds than the United States).
The
analysis found temperature-and-pollution spikes tended to increase
hospital admissions and deaths by 2 percent to 5 percent the first
day. Adverse health effects and mortality mounted with each day of a
heat wave.
But
extreme cold events typically had no effect on hospitalization and
death numbers. In some cases, hospital admissions actually decreased
during extreme cold days – probably, researchers speculate, because
people have trouble traveling to hospitals on icy roads.
Their
analysis of heat waves (averaging about one per year in Germany
between 1999 and 2006) took into account the grimly named "harvesting
effect," when the gravely ill, whose deaths were imminent, died
during the first day or two of extreme heat.
"We
showed that extremely high temperatures do not lead to a permanent
increase in hospitalizations and deaths – just an 'instantaneous
heat-health relationship' in the short term," Ziebarth noted.
Distributed
across the entire population of a country like Germany or the United
States, Ziebarth estimated, the cost of a hot day is between 10 cents
and 68 cents per resident in health care and lost productivity.
Looking
ahead, other researchers link the melting arctic sea ice to colder
winters (and occasional, atypically chilly summer days) in North
America and Europe. Climate change is leading to more frequent, more
severe heat and cold events in the mid-latitudes, and that trend is
probably unstoppable, they say.
But,
the researchers said, one factor in the heat/pollution/health
connection could be controlled by national and municipal governments:
air quality. "Lower pollution-alert levels would be beneficial
for population health," they conclude in the report, "and
would save lives."
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