Vulnerability to Heat Stress in Urban Areas: A Sustainability Perspective

abstract: Extreme hot-weather events have become life-threatening natural phenomena in many cities around the world, and the health impacts of excessive heat are expected to increase with climate change (Huang et al. 2011; Knowlton et al. 2007; Meehl and Tebaldi 2004; Patz 2005). Heat waves will lik...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Chuang, Wen-Ching (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
GIS
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.20929
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-20929
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-209292018-06-22T03:04:38Z Vulnerability to Heat Stress in Urban Areas: A Sustainability Perspective abstract: Extreme hot-weather events have become life-threatening natural phenomena in many cities around the world, and the health impacts of excessive heat are expected to increase with climate change (Huang et al. 2011; Knowlton et al. 2007; Meehl and Tebaldi 2004; Patz 2005). Heat waves will likely have the worst health impacts in urban areas, where large numbers of vulnerable people reside and where local-scale urban heat island effects (UHI) retard and reduce nighttime cooling. This dissertation presents three empirical case studies that were conducted to advance our understanding of human vulnerability to heat in coupled human-natural systems. Using vulnerability theory as a framework, I analyzed how various social and environmental components of a system interact to exacerbate or mitigate heat impacts on human health, with the goal of contributing to the conceptualization of human vulnerability to heat. The studies: 1) compared the relationship between temperature and health outcomes in Chicago and Phoenix; 2) compared a map derived from a theoretical generic index of vulnerability to heat with a map derived from actual heat-related hospitalizations in Phoenix; and 3) used geospatial information on health data at two areal units to identify the hot spots for two heat health outcomes in Phoenix. The results show a 10-degree Celsius difference in the threshold temperatures at which heat-stress calls in Phoenix and Chicago are likely to increase drastically, and that Chicago is likely to be more sensitive to climate change than Phoenix. I also found that heat-vulnerability indices are sensitive to scale, measurement, and context, and that cities will need to incorporate place-based factors to increase the usefulness of vulnerability indices and mapping to decision making. Finally, I found that identification of geographical hot-spot of heat-related illness depends on the type of data used, scale of measurement, and normalization procedures. I recommend using multiple datasets and different approaches to spatial analysis to overcome this limitation and help decision makers develop effective intervention strategies. Dissertation/Thesis Chuang, Wen-Ching (Author) Gober, Patricia (Advisor) Boone, Christopher (Committee member) Guhathakurta, Subhrajit (Committee member) Ruddell, Darren (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Sustainability Public health Climate change Climate change GIS Heat-related emergency calls heat stress Hospitalization Vulnerability eng 114 pages Ph.D. Sustainability 2013 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.20929 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2013
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Sustainability
Public health
Climate change
Climate change
GIS
Heat-related emergency calls
heat stress
Hospitalization
Vulnerability
spellingShingle Sustainability
Public health
Climate change
Climate change
GIS
Heat-related emergency calls
heat stress
Hospitalization
Vulnerability
Vulnerability to Heat Stress in Urban Areas: A Sustainability Perspective
description abstract: Extreme hot-weather events have become life-threatening natural phenomena in many cities around the world, and the health impacts of excessive heat are expected to increase with climate change (Huang et al. 2011; Knowlton et al. 2007; Meehl and Tebaldi 2004; Patz 2005). Heat waves will likely have the worst health impacts in urban areas, where large numbers of vulnerable people reside and where local-scale urban heat island effects (UHI) retard and reduce nighttime cooling. This dissertation presents three empirical case studies that were conducted to advance our understanding of human vulnerability to heat in coupled human-natural systems. Using vulnerability theory as a framework, I analyzed how various social and environmental components of a system interact to exacerbate or mitigate heat impacts on human health, with the goal of contributing to the conceptualization of human vulnerability to heat. The studies: 1) compared the relationship between temperature and health outcomes in Chicago and Phoenix; 2) compared a map derived from a theoretical generic index of vulnerability to heat with a map derived from actual heat-related hospitalizations in Phoenix; and 3) used geospatial information on health data at two areal units to identify the hot spots for two heat health outcomes in Phoenix. The results show a 10-degree Celsius difference in the threshold temperatures at which heat-stress calls in Phoenix and Chicago are likely to increase drastically, and that Chicago is likely to be more sensitive to climate change than Phoenix. I also found that heat-vulnerability indices are sensitive to scale, measurement, and context, and that cities will need to incorporate place-based factors to increase the usefulness of vulnerability indices and mapping to decision making. Finally, I found that identification of geographical hot-spot of heat-related illness depends on the type of data used, scale of measurement, and normalization procedures. I recommend using multiple datasets and different approaches to spatial analysis to overcome this limitation and help decision makers develop effective intervention strategies. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Sustainability 2013
author2 Chuang, Wen-Ching (Author)
author_facet Chuang, Wen-Ching (Author)
title Vulnerability to Heat Stress in Urban Areas: A Sustainability Perspective
title_short Vulnerability to Heat Stress in Urban Areas: A Sustainability Perspective
title_full Vulnerability to Heat Stress in Urban Areas: A Sustainability Perspective
title_fullStr Vulnerability to Heat Stress in Urban Areas: A Sustainability Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Vulnerability to Heat Stress in Urban Areas: A Sustainability Perspective
title_sort vulnerability to heat stress in urban areas: a sustainability perspective
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.20929
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