Abstract

Extreme heat is a major threat to human health worldwide. The COVID-19 pandemic, with its complexity and global reach, created unprecedented challenges for public health and highlighted societal vulnerability to hazardous hot weather. In this study, we used data from a three-wave nationally representative survey of 3036 American adults to examine how the COVID-19 pandemic affected extreme heat vulnerability during the summer of 2020. We used mixed effects models to examine the roles of socio-demographic characteristics and pandemic-related factors in the distribution of negative heat effects and experiences across the United States. The survey findings show that over a quarter of the US population experienced heat-related symptoms during the summer of 2020. Mixed effects models demonstrate that among all socio-economic groups, those who were most vulnerable were women, those in low-income households, unemployed or on furlough, and people who identify as Hispanic or Latino or as other non-white census categories (including Asian, American Indian or Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, and multi-racial US residents). The study findings indicate that millions of people in the US had difficulty coping with or responding to extreme heat because of the direct and indirect effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. Limited access to cooling as well as COVID-19 related social isolation played a major role in adverse heat health effects. Geographically, the South and the West of the US stood out in terms of self-reported negative heat effects. Overall, the study suggests that the intersection of two health hazards—extreme heat and coronavirus SARS-CoV2—amplified existing systemic vulnerabilities and expanded the demographic range of people vulnerable to heat stress.

Highlights

  • Extreme heat is a known risk to human health

  • We modeled two additional outcome variables that were included as predictors in the other models: (d) access to home air conditioning (AC), and (e) an index of social isolation related to the COVID-19 pandemic

  • One-third of the United States (US) population expressed some degree of worry about heat when they were at work

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Extreme heat is a known risk to human health. Prior research established temperature-mortality relationships (Anderson et al 2013, Gasparrini et al 2015, O’Lenick et al 2020) and provided key insights into the processes that drive social vulnerability to extreme heat, including individual decision-making and broader societal factors (Harlan et al 2013, Hayden et al 2017, Howe et al 2019). In the early days of the pandemic, government policies focused on reducing SARS-CoV2 transmission and contact among individuals included issuing stay-athome orders, and closing businesses, public buildings and gathering places (Philpot et al 2021). These necessary actions were effective in slowing the coronavirus transmission and saving lives (Lurie et al 2020, Medline et al 2020, Padalabalanarayanan et al 2020). They limited access to cooling centers, significantly decreased human face-to-face interactions, an important aspect of social capital (Kent et al 2019), and resulted in an economic downturn across the US (del Rio-Chanona et al 2020)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call