MyJournals Home  

RSS FeedsIJERPH, Vol. 16, Pages 1026: Temperature-Related Summer Mortality Under Multiple Climate, Population, and Adaptation Scenarios (International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health)

 
 

21 march 2019 15:00:16

 
IJERPH, Vol. 16, Pages 1026: Temperature-Related Summer Mortality Under Multiple Climate, Population, and Adaptation Scenarios (International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health)
 


Projections of the magnitude and pattern of possible health risks from climate change should be based on multiple climate and development scenarios to describe the range of uncertainties, to inform effective and efficient policies. For a better understanding of climate change-related risks in seven metropolitan cities of South Korea, we estimated temperature-related summer (June to August) mortality until 2100 using projected changes in climate, population, and adaptation. In addition, we extracted the variations in the mortality estimates associated with uncertainties in climate, population, and adaptation scenarios using 25 climate models, two Representative Concentration Pathways (RCP 4.5 and 8.5), three population scenarios (high, medium and low variants), and four adaptation scenarios (absolute threshold shift, slope reduction in the temperature-mortality relationship, a combination of slope reduction and threshold shift, and a sigmoid function based on the historical trend). Compared to the baseline period (1991–2015), temperature-attributable mortality in South Korea during summer in the 2090s is projected to increase 5.1 times for RCP 4.5 and 12.9 times for RCP 8.5 due to climate and population changes. Estimated future mortality varies by up to +44%/−55%, −80%, −60%, and +12%/−11% associated with the choice of climate models, adaptation, climate, and population scenarios, respectively, compared to the mortality estimated for the median of the climate models, no adaptation, RCP 8.5, and medium population variant. Health system choices about adaptation are the most important determinants of future mortality after climate projections. The range of possible future mortality underscores the importance of flexible, iterative risk management.


 
64 viewsCategory: Medicine, Pathology, Toxicology
 
IJERPH, Vol. 16, Pages 1027: Salt-Related Knowledge, Attitudes, and Behaviors on Efate Island, Vanuatu (International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health)
IJERPH, Vol. 16, Pages 1034: Why I Can`t, Won`t or Don`t Test for HIV: Insights from Australian Migrants Born in Sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia and Northeast Asia (International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health)
 
 
blog comments powered by Disqus


MyJournals.org
The latest issues of all your favorite science journals on one page

Username:
Password:

Register | Retrieve

Search:

Toxicology


Copyright © 2008 - 2024 Indigonet Services B.V.. Contact: Tim Hulsen. Read here our privacy notice.
Other websites of Indigonet Services B.V.: Nieuws Vacatures News Tweets Nachrichten