Methods of Assessing Health Care Costs in a Changing Climate: A Case Study of Heatwaves and Ambulance Dispatches in Tasmania, Australia

Author:

Campbell Sharon L.12ORCID,Remenyi Tomas3ORCID,Johnston Fay H.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Menzies Institute for Medical Research University of Tasmania Hobart TAS Australia

2. Public Health Services Department of Health (Tasmania) Hobart TAS Australia

3. Climate Futures Research Group School of Geography Planning and Spatial Sciences University of Tasmania Hobart TAS Australia

Abstract

AbstractAnthropogenic climate change is causing a rise in global temperatures, with this trend projected to increase into the future. Rising temperatures result in an increase in the frequency and severity of heatwave events, with an associated increase in poor health outcomes for vulnerable individuals. This places an increasing strain on health care services. However, methods calculating future health care costs associated with this trend are poorly understood. We calculated health care costs attributable to heatwave events in Tasmania 2009–2019, using ambulance dispatches as a case study. We also modeled the expected health and economic burden for projected heatwave frequencies between 2010 and 2089. We developed our models based on two possible approaches to describing population adaptation to heatwaves—an adapted population calculated by determining heatwave episodes using a rolling baseline, and a non‐adapted population calculated by determining heatwave episodes using a static baseline. Using a rolling baseline calculation for 2010 to 2089, we estimated additional ambulance costs averaging AUD$57,147 per year and totaling AUD$4,571,788. For the same period using a static baseline, we estimated additional ambulance costs averaging AUD$517,342 per year and totaling AUD$41,387,349. While this method is suitable for estimating the health care costs associated with heatwaves, it could be utilized for estimating health care costs related to other climate‐related extreme events. Different methods of estimating heatwaves, modeling an adapted versus non‐adapted population, provide substantial differences in projected costs. There is potential for considerable health system cost savings when a population is supported to adapt to extreme heat.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Pollution,Waste Management and Disposal,Water Science and Technology,Epidemiology,Global and Planetary Change

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