Estimating health-related costs of ten US climate-sensitive events in 2012: a retrospective study

Background: Climate change threatens human health, but there is a lack of evidence on the economic toll of these risks. Health-related cost estimates for climate-sensitive impacts illuminate an understudied impact of climate change and highlight how this threat is affecting sectors beyond property a...

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Main Authors: Vijay S Limaye, PhD, Wendy Max, ProfPhD, Juanita Constible, MS, Kim Knowlton, DrPH
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-09-01
Series:The Lancet Planetary Health
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2542519619301482
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spelling doaj-84ea77d5a85f445e817c70e26df342cc2020-11-25T01:20:45ZengElsevierThe Lancet Planetary Health2542-51962019-09-013S5Estimating health-related costs of ten US climate-sensitive events in 2012: a retrospective studyVijay S Limaye, PhD0Wendy Max, ProfPhD1Juanita Constible, MS2Kim Knowlton, DrPH3Natural Resources Defense Council, New York, NY, USA; Correspondence to: Dr V Limaye, Natural Resources Defense Council, New York, NY 10011, USAUniversity of California-San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USANatural Resources Defense Council, New York, NY, USANatural Resources Defense Council, New York, NY, USABackground: Climate change threatens human health, but there is a lack of evidence on the economic toll of these risks. Health-related cost estimates for climate-sensitive impacts illuminate an understudied impact of climate change and highlight how this threat is affecting sectors beyond property and infrastructure. Furthermore, cost estimates can guide health interventions and help public health professionals assess whether climate change adaptation measures are achieving their intended benefits. Methods: We estimate mortality and morbidity costs associated with ten climate-sensitive case studies spanning eleven US states in 2012 (when the country experienced some of its warmest weather to date); the case studies include wildfires, extreme heat, West Nile Virus and Lyme disease, extreme precipitation and flooding, harmful algal blooms, allergenic pollen, ozone air pollution, and a major hurricane. We estimate the mortality and morbidity associated with each event using data reported in peer-reviewed epidemiology studies, state and federal data, and environmental public health tracking network data collected by state public health agencies. We augment this information with imputed incidence data from national healthcare utilisation statistics. Findings: Applying value of a statistical life and cost-of-illness approaches to publicly-available data from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, we estimate total health-related costs associated with these case studies (from 917 deaths, 20 568 hospitalisations and 17 857 emergency department visits) of about $10·0 billion in 2018 dollars, with a sensitivity range of $2·7 billion to $24·6 billion. Interpretation: By better characterising these health damages in economic terms, this work helps characterise the burden that climate change already places on human health. In doing so, we provide a quantitative framework for broader estimation of climate-sensitive health-related costs. Expanded quantification of the budgetary pressures posed by climate change can help decision makers engage with the scale of the challenge and prioritise efficient adaptation strategies to protect public health. Funding: None.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2542519619301482
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vijay S Limaye, PhD
Wendy Max, ProfPhD
Juanita Constible, MS
Kim Knowlton, DrPH
spellingShingle Vijay S Limaye, PhD
Wendy Max, ProfPhD
Juanita Constible, MS
Kim Knowlton, DrPH
Estimating health-related costs of ten US climate-sensitive events in 2012: a retrospective study
The Lancet Planetary Health
author_facet Vijay S Limaye, PhD
Wendy Max, ProfPhD
Juanita Constible, MS
Kim Knowlton, DrPH
author_sort Vijay S Limaye, PhD
title Estimating health-related costs of ten US climate-sensitive events in 2012: a retrospective study
title_short Estimating health-related costs of ten US climate-sensitive events in 2012: a retrospective study
title_full Estimating health-related costs of ten US climate-sensitive events in 2012: a retrospective study
title_fullStr Estimating health-related costs of ten US climate-sensitive events in 2012: a retrospective study
title_full_unstemmed Estimating health-related costs of ten US climate-sensitive events in 2012: a retrospective study
title_sort estimating health-related costs of ten us climate-sensitive events in 2012: a retrospective study
publisher Elsevier
series The Lancet Planetary Health
issn 2542-5196
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Background: Climate change threatens human health, but there is a lack of evidence on the economic toll of these risks. Health-related cost estimates for climate-sensitive impacts illuminate an understudied impact of climate change and highlight how this threat is affecting sectors beyond property and infrastructure. Furthermore, cost estimates can guide health interventions and help public health professionals assess whether climate change adaptation measures are achieving their intended benefits. Methods: We estimate mortality and morbidity costs associated with ten climate-sensitive case studies spanning eleven US states in 2012 (when the country experienced some of its warmest weather to date); the case studies include wildfires, extreme heat, West Nile Virus and Lyme disease, extreme precipitation and flooding, harmful algal blooms, allergenic pollen, ozone air pollution, and a major hurricane. We estimate the mortality and morbidity associated with each event using data reported in peer-reviewed epidemiology studies, state and federal data, and environmental public health tracking network data collected by state public health agencies. We augment this information with imputed incidence data from national healthcare utilisation statistics. Findings: Applying value of a statistical life and cost-of-illness approaches to publicly-available data from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, we estimate total health-related costs associated with these case studies (from 917 deaths, 20 568 hospitalisations and 17 857 emergency department visits) of about $10·0 billion in 2018 dollars, with a sensitivity range of $2·7 billion to $24·6 billion. Interpretation: By better characterising these health damages in economic terms, this work helps characterise the burden that climate change already places on human health. In doing so, we provide a quantitative framework for broader estimation of climate-sensitive health-related costs. Expanded quantification of the budgetary pressures posed by climate change can help decision makers engage with the scale of the challenge and prioritise efficient adaptation strategies to protect public health. Funding: None.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2542519619301482
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