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  • 标题:The effect of deforestation and climate change on all-cause mortality and unsafe work conditions due to heat exposure in Berau, Indonesia: a modelling study
  • 本地全文:下载
  • 作者:Nicholas H Wolff ; Lucas R Vargas Zeppetello ; Luke A Parsons
  • 期刊名称:The Lancet Planetary Health
  • 电子版ISSN:2542-5196
  • 出版年度:2021
  • 卷号:5
  • 期号:12
  • 页码:e882-e892
  • DOI:10.1016/S2542-5196(21)00279-5
  • 语种:English
  • 出版社:Elsevier
  • 摘要:SummaryBackgroundPrevious studies focusing on urban, industrialised regions have found that excess heat exposure can increase all-cause mortality, heat-related illnesses, and occupational injuries. However, little research has examined how deforestation and climate change can adversely affect work conditions and population health in low latitude, industrialising countries.MethodsFor this modelling study we used data at 1 km2resolution to compare forest cover and temperature conditions in the Berau regency, Indonesia, between 2002 and 2018. We used spatially explicit satellite, climate model, and population data to estimate the effects of global warming, between 2002 and 2018 and after applying 1·0°C, 1·5°C, and 2·0°C of global warming to 2018 temperatures, on all-cause mortality and unsafe work conditions in the Berau regency, Indonesia.FindingsBetween 2002 and 2018, 4375 km2of forested land in Berau was cleared, corresponding to approximately 17% of the entire regency. Deforestation increased mean daily maximum temperatures by 0·95°C (95% CI 0·97–0·92; p<0·0001). Mean daily temperatures increased by a population-weighted 0·86°C, accounting for an estimated 7·3–8·5% of all-cause mortality (or 101–118 additional deaths per year) in 2018. Unsafe work time increased by 0·31 h per day (95% CI 0·30–0·32; p<0·0001) in deforested areas compared to 0·03 h per day (0·03–0·04; p<0·0001) in areas that maintained forest cover. With 2·0°C of additional future global warming, relative to 2018, deforested areas could experience an estimated 17–20% increase in all-cause mortality (corresponding to an additional 236–282 deaths per year) and up to 5 h of unsafe work per day.InterpretationHeat exposure from deforestation and climate change has already started affecting populations in low latitude, industrialising countries, and future global warming indicates substantial health impacts in these regions. Further research should examine how deforestation is currently affecting the health and wellbeing of local communities.FundingUniversity of Washington Population Health Initiative.TranslationFor the Bahasa translation of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section.
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