Putting risk in its place: Methodological considerations for investigatingextreme event health risk

Authors
Citation
Ke. Smoyer, Putting risk in its place: Methodological considerations for investigatingextreme event health risk, SOCIAL SC M, 47(11), 1998, pp. 1809-1824
Citations number
70
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science
Journal title
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
ISSN journal
02779536 → ACNP
Volume
47
Issue
11
Year of publication
1998
Pages
1809 - 1824
Database
ISI
SICI code
0277-9536(199812)47:11<1809:PRIIPM>2.0.ZU;2-9
Abstract
Health is affected by the places in which people live, work and interact, y et many epidemiological studies overlook the characteristics of places and instead focus solely on the people who inhabit them. Place-based investigat ions of disparities in health outcomes are concerned with the healthiness o f places and not merely the healthiness of the populations in these places. A place-based approach has been used within medical geography and medical sociology, typically in the study of health differentials associated with l ong-term, cumulative exposures to a wide range of environmental variables. This approach has rarely been extended, however, to health research that lo oks at the effects of extreme events (such as industrial accidents or hurri canes). The purpose of this paper is to incorporate a place-based framework into extreme event health research. The paper first discusses methodologic al considerations for a place-based approach and then illustrates the use o f spatial analysis techniques as the first step in identifying place-based risk factors in mortality associated with heat waves. The study centers on St. Louis, Missouri, a city where hear waves are frequent and heat-related mortality is high. The results show that heat-related mortality rates durin g the most severe heat waves were generally higher in the warmer, less stab le and more disadvantaged areas of St. Louis and lower in the cooler and mo re affluent parts of the city. During the milder years analyzed, there was little evidence of a relationship between place-based characteristics and t he distribution of heat-related mortality. These findings about extreme eve nt mortality risk would not have been evident from a population-based analy sis. Ongoing dialog between epidemiologists and social scientists can help to bring place into the arena of extreme event research and to increase und erstanding of the role of place in risk. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.