Individually experienced heat stress among elderly residents of an urban slum and rural village in India

The elderly are one of the most vulnerable groups to heat-related illnesses and mortality. In tropical countries like India, where heat waves have increased in frequency and severity, few studies have focused on the level of stress experienced by the elderly. The study presented here included 130 el...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of biometeorology 2022-06, Vol.66 (6), p.1145-1162
Hauptverfasser: Weitz, Charles A., Mukhopadhyay, Barun, Das, Ketaki
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Mukhopadhyay, Barun
Das, Ketaki
description The elderly are one of the most vulnerable groups to heat-related illnesses and mortality. In tropical countries like India, where heat waves have increased in frequency and severity, few studies have focused on the level of stress experienced by the elderly. The study presented here included 130 elderly residents of Kolkata slums and 180 elderly residents of rural villages about 75 km south of Kolkata. It used miniature monitoring devices to continuously measure temperature, humidity, and heat index experienced during everyday activities over 24-h study periods, during hot summer months. In the Kolkata slum, construction materials and the urban heat island effect combined to create hotter indoor than outdoor conditions throughout the day, and particularly at night. As a result, elderly slum residents were 4.3 times more likely to experience dangerous heat index levels (≥ 45°C) compared to rural village elderly. In both locations, the median 24-h heat indexes of active elderly were up to 2°C higher than inactive/sedentary elderly ( F = 25.479, p < 0.001). Among Kolkata slums residents, there were no significant gender differences in heat exposure during the day or night, but in the rural village, elderly women were 4 times more likely to experience dangerous heat index levels during the hottest times of the day compared to elderly men. Given the decline in thermoregulatory capacity associated with aging and the increasing severity of extreme summer heat in India, these results forecast a growing public health challenge that will require both scientific and government attention.
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source SpringerNature Journals
subjects Aging
Animal Physiology
Biological and Medical Physics
Biometeorology
Biophysics
Construction materials
Earth and Environmental Science
Environment
Environmental Health
Gender aspects
Gender differences
Geriatrics
Ghettos
Heat
Heat index
Heat stress
Heat tolerance
Heat waves
Humidity
Island effects
Meteorology
Mortality
Night
Older people
Original Paper
Outdoor activities
Plant Physiology
Public health
Sex differences
Slums
Socioeconomic factors
Summer
Urban heat islands
Villages
Women
title Individually experienced heat stress among elderly residents of an urban slum and rural village in India
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