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Paul English, PhD MPH Population Vulnerabilities for Climate Change Health Risks Paul English PhD, MPH.

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Presentation on theme: "Paul English, PhD MPH Population Vulnerabilities for Climate Change Health Risks Paul English PhD, MPH."— Presentation transcript:

1 Paul English, PhD MPH Population Vulnerabilities for Climate Change Health Risks Paul English PhD, MPH

2 Vulnerability Vulnerability to climate change is “the degree to which geophysical, biological and socio-economic systems are susceptible to, and unable to cope with, adverse impacts of climate change.” (Füssel and Klein, 2006) 2

3 Community’s overall vulnerability Exposure: Changing environment due to global warming Population characteristics/Sensitivity (e.g. age, pre-existing disease) Adaptive capacity : –Community Resilience (Resources) –Response Capacity: Capacity of public health and emergency response infrastructure

4 Population Sensitivity Varies by Climate Health Threat Heat: – Elderly, Medical compromised, Social Isolation, Children, low income, occupational Flooding/Extreme events: – Elderly, low-income, homeless, disabled, lack of transportation, obese, co-morbid Drought: – dialysis patients, elderly, pregnant and nursing women, infants, immunocompromised individuals

5 Vulnerability Assessment in BRACE Statewide vulnerability data will be used to develop vulnerability indicators and maps for all census tracts in California A more detailed vulnerability assessment will be done in at least one county from each of the ten multi- county regions. Assessments will use 2000 as a baseline and we will make estimates for each decade up to 2040 and a final statewide assessment at 2099. For each assessment, we will use projected demographic data and projected climate change data (sea level rise, wildfire risk, and extreme heat days).

6 Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment* Data were ranked by quintiles and mapped for census tracts; Final vulnerability score a sum & re-ranking across all metric ranks * English et al, Intl J Climate Change, 2013 MetricSource Central air conditioningCA Energy Commission (2009) Tree canopyNational Land Cover Database (2001) Impervious surfaceNational Land Cover Database (2001) Public transit routesSCAG 2011; Fresno COG 2011 Elderly living aloneCensus 2000 Household car accessCensus 2000 Wildfire riskCAL FIRE 2003 Flood riskFEMA (Fresno 2009; LA 2008) Sea rise inundationPacific Institute 2009 (LA only) 6

7 LA County Climate Change Vulnerability Proportion of households with central AC 7

8 LA County Climate Change Vulnerability Final CDPH Climate Scores 8

9 LA County (including residential & sensitive populations land use mask) Final CDPH Climate Scores 9

10 Final CDPH Climate Scores + Cumulative Impacts Score LA County (including residential & sensitive populations land use mask) 10

11 46% of African Americans and 36% of Latinos reside in the two highest risk categories compared to 30% of whites Los Angeles County 11

12 12 In LA County, median income in the highest risk area is 40% lower than the lowest risk area

13 Questions What LHD staff & programs / policy leaders/ partners/ stakeholders will you share this with; and how and in what context or venue will you present it; get feedback; and adapt and update it as new information is available? Will you engage vulnerable populations directly or work with partners for community -based input on the maps and report? 13


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