Affiliation:
1. Faculty of Architectural Engineering Yiwu Industrial and Commercial College Yiwu 322000 China
2. Centre for Climate‐Resilient and Low‐Carbon Cities School of Architecture and Urban Planning Key Laboratory of New Technology for Construction of Cities in Mountain Area Ministry of Education Chongqing University Chongqing 400045 China
3. CMA Key Open Laboratory of Transforming Climate Resources to Economy Chongqing 401147 China
4. School of Urban Planning and Design Shenzhen Graduate School Peking University Shenzhen 518000 China
Abstract
AbstractUnderstanding heat‐related impacts is crucial to improving public awareness of addressing urban heat challenges and enabling decision makers to mainstream heat action plans. This study explores heat‐related physiological and psychological impacts, symptoms, and demographic determinants based on 4210 questionnaires across nine large Chinese cities, including Chengdu, Chongqing, Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Nanchang, Nanjing, Shanghai, Shenyang, and Xi'an in August 2020. The results indicate that heat‐related psychological impacts are equally severe as physiological impacts. Chongqing is under the most severe heat‐related health impact on both the physiological and psychological aspects. Skin heat damage (SKI), digestive system illnesses (DIG), respiratory illnesses (RES), and cardiovascular illnesses (CAR) are prominent physiological illnesses in all cities, while emotional irritability (EMO), easy to lose control temper (EAS), low mood (LOW), and insomnia (INS) are prominent psychological symptoms. Chongqing and Guangzhou are the most vulnerable cities in terms of physiological and psychological symptoms. Chengdu, Hangzhou, Nanjing, and Shanghai are more resilient in terms of physiological symptoms, whereas Chengdu, Hangzhou, and Shanghai are more resistant to psychological symptoms. Heat‐related health impacts, symptoms, and demographic determinants are spatially heterogeneous. The elderly and patients are more vulnerable, while such a conclusion is not always true. The spatial heterogeneity of heat‐related physiological and psychological impacts, symptoms, and drivers highlights the significance of developing city‐specific heat health action plans.
Subject
General Environmental Science,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Cited by
1 articles.
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