Exploring socio-environmental effects on community health in Edmonton, Canada to understand older adult and immigrant risk in a changing climate

We investigated health risks associated with climate and air pollution hazards and community covariates to generate insights into the resilience of older adults and immigrants at the community level in a northern urban center in the Canadian prairies. Communities with higher proportions of older adu...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Urban climate 2022-07, Vol.44, p.101225, Article 101225
Hauptverfasser: Tilstra, McKenzie H., Nielsen, Charlene C., Tiwari, Ishwar, Jones, C. Allyson, Vargas, Alvaro Osornio, Quemerais, Bernadette, Bulut, Okan, Salma, Jordana, Yamamoto, Shelby S.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:We investigated health risks associated with climate and air pollution hazards and community covariates to generate insights into the resilience of older adults and immigrants at the community level in a northern urban center in the Canadian prairies. Communities with higher proportions of older adults were associated with increased cardiovascular, injury, mental, and respiratory health event rates. Notably, heat effects on injury rates impacted communities with higher percentages of older adults (Prevalence Rate Ratio (PRR) [95%CI] 1.110 [1.011, 1.219] at 25% ≥65 years). Ozone effects on cardiovascular event rates exhibited similar trends. Areas with higher percentages of immigrants generally had lower rates of hxealth events. However, increasing diurnal temperature range became a risk factor for respiratory health rates where there were higher percentages of refugees (PRR 1.205 [1.004, 1.447] at 20%). Industrial emission effects on injury and respiratory health rates also amplified in areas with higher percentages of refugees (PRR 1.127 [1.058, 1.200]; 1.130 [1.050, 1.216] at 20%). Similar effects were observed for mental health event rates and total immigrants. Greater neighborhood material and social deprivation were significant risk factors for increased health event rates across outcomes. Future work should focus on disproportionately affected vulnerable populations to address community-level resilience. [Display omitted] •Rates of health events were higher in areas with a higher % of older adults.•Community health effects varied by immigrant subgroups (refugee, economic).•Some climate hazards had a greater health effect in areas with a higher % of older adults, immigrants, or refugees.•Areas with higher material and social deprivation had higher rates of health events.•Areas with higher greenness and better active living environments had lower rates of health events.
ISSN:2212-0955
2212-0955
DOI:10.1016/j.uclim.2022.101225