Title: Cook County, Illinois: July 95
1Hot Times in Puget SoundThe New Heat Health
Warning SystemPartners in Emergency
Preparedness Conference
Seattle, WashingtonApril 19, 2005
Dr. Laurence S. KalksteinCenter for Climatic
ResearchUniversity of Delaware
Presented at NLIEC, June 14, 2005by Jon
SkindlovSalt River Project
2Goals
- Outline some bio-climatological principles that
should be utilized in evaluating weather/human
health issues - Discuss the nature of our established heat/health
watch warning systems - Mention certain intervention activities that are
useful in lessening the impact of heat on human
health
3Human Response to Weather is Relative, Not
Absolute
- Thresholds vary from city to city
- Magnitude of responses vary from city to city
4Human Response Varies Within the Same City!
Mortality variation from
mean Air mass type Early season heat waves
Philadelphia 01 Jul 1994 05 Jul 1994
77 Hot, dry air mass
08 Jun 1996 14 Jun 1996 62
Hot, moist air mass Late season heat
waves Philadelphia 17 Sep 1987 19 Sep 1987
-33 Hot, dry air mass
04 Aug 1995 12 Aug 1995 -32
Hot, moist air mass __________________________
____________
- Given the same magnitude, early season heat waves
are much more dangerous than late season heat
waves - Thus, thresholds vary within the same city during
the season
5Chicago, Illinois July 1995 Daily Mortality
- Deaths can be over double baseline levels during
very hot weather
6Would These People Have Died Shortly Afterward
Regardless of the Heat Wave?
New York, 1966
Excess deaths associated with heat wave
Reduced mortality rate following heat wave
- Approximately 20-40 percent of the population
would have died during the following month
regardless of the heat wave
7Human Mitigation Activities Does Air
Conditioning Reduce Heat-Related Mortality?
- The reduction of mortality over the last 40 years
is greater within the hot, oppressive air masses,
when air conditioning would be operating - Use of air conditioning has increased from 1090
percent during this period
8Human Mitigation Activities Does Air
Conditioning Reduce Heat-Related Mortality?
Air Conditioning and Mortality in Philadelphia
- We estimate a 26 percent decline in human
mortality in Philadelphia and other U.S. cities
attributed to increased air conditioning use over
the last 40 years - BUT..!!
9Question With these factors in mind, how
can we reduce heat/related illness and mortality
in large urban areas?Answer A possible
solution The development of operational
heat/health warning systems for urban areas
10How Are These Systems Unique?
- A custom-made system is developed for each urban
area, based on specific meteorology for each
locale, as well as urban structure and
demographics - These systems are based on actual weather-health
relationships, as determined by daily variations
in human mortality - These systems are based on much more than just
temperature and humidity
11Systems We are Presently Operating
- USA
- Chicago, IL
- Dallas/Ft. Worth, TX
- Dayton/Cincinnati, OH
- Jackson/Meridian, MS
- Lake Charles/Alexandria, LA
- Little Rock/Pine Bluff, AR
- Memphis, TN/Tupelo, MS
- New Orleans/Baton Rouge, LA
- Philadelphia, PA
- Phoenix, AZ
- Seattle, WA
- St. Louis, MO
- Shreveport/Monroe, LA
- Washington, D.C.
- Yuma, AZ
- International
- Bologna, Italy
- Milano, Italy
- Palermo, Italy
- Rome, Italy
- Shanghai, China
- Torino, Italy
- Toronto, Canada
- Proposed Systems
- Portland, OR
- Kansas City, MO
- three additional cities in Italy
- Phoenix evaporative cooler addendum
New five-day forecast systems based on point
forecast matrices
12Steps in System Development
- Step 1 Determine air masses daily over a city
using newly-developed Spatial Synoptic
Classification (SSC) - Step 2 Are any of these air masses offensive?
- Characteristics
- Statistically significant higher
mortality - Greater within air mass standard
deviation in mortality - Step 3 What aspects of the offensive air mass
make it most detrimental to human health?
13SSC Air Mass Types
- DP Dry Polar (cP)
- DM Dry Moderate (Pacific)
- DT Dry Tropical (cT)
- MP Moist Polar (mP)
- MM Moist Moderate (Overrunning)
- MT Moist Tropical (mT)
- MT Moist Tropical Plus
- TR Transition between air masses
- ----------------
Sheridan, S.C., 2002 The redevelopment of a
weather-type classification scheme for North
America. Int. J. Climatology, 22,
51-68. Kalkstein, L.S., C.D. Barthel, J.S. Greene
and M.C. Nichols, 1996. A New Spatial Synoptic
Classification Application to Air Mass
Analysis. Int. J. Climatology, 16, 983-1004.
14Characteristics of SeattleAir Mass Types
Mean air mass frequency from 1 June through 31
August
15Removing Non-Climatological Noise from the
Mortality Data
16Phoenixs Rising Mortality
17Mean Deaths in Rome by Daystandardization is
important
18Mean Mortality Increases Within Offensive Air
Mass Types
Location (Freq) DT MT
3.7 (8)
a MT does not occur in Seattle the moist air
mass that is oppressive is MT. DT air mass for
Phoenix
19Development of Forecast Algorithms Within-Air
Mass Category Mortality Variations
20ROME
MT mortality decreases through summer
21ROME
DT mortality vs. morning temperature
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26Year-to-Year Variability Seattle, Washington
Warnings Called
1980 data are missing
27Intervention Actions When Health Warning is
Issued Philadelphia Department of Public Health
- Media announcement
- Promotion of the buddy system
- Activation of the heatline
- Home visits
- Nursing and personal care boarding home
intervention - Halt of utility service suspensions
- Increased emergency medical service staffing
- Daytime outreach to the homeless
- Air conditioned service facility capability
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29Effectiveness of Philadelphia Heat Health System
(based on Ebi et. al.)
- Study evaluated effectiveness of Philadelphia
system for the summers of 1995-98. - It is estimated that 2.6 lives were saved on
average, for each warning day and for the
following three days. - Therefore, based on the number of warnings called
by the Philadelphia Weather Service Forecast
Office, the watch warning system saved an
estimated 117 lives over the four summer period
______________ K.L. Ebi, T.J. Teisberg, L.S.
Kalkstein, L.Robinson, R.F. Weiher, 2004. Heat
Watch/Warning Systems Save Lives Estimated Costs
and Benefits for Philadelphia 1995-1998.
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
85 1067-74.
30Improvements to be Made to the Seattle System
- Will be extended to a five-day forecast period
through the use of Point Forecast Matrix (PFM)
forecasts - Will include multiple locations in the Seattle
area, such as Tacoma. These are to be discussed.
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