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Current and projected heatwave-attributable occupational injuries, illnesses, and associated economic burden in Australia.

Authors :
Borg, Matthew A.
Xiang, Jianjun
Anikeeva, Olga
Ostendorf, Bertram
Varghese, Blesson
Dear, Keith
Pisaniello, Dino
Hansen, Alana
Zander, Kerstin
Sim, Malcolm R.
Bi, Peng
Source :
Environmental Research. Nov2023:Part 2, Vol. 236, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The costs of global warming are substantial. These include expenses from occupational illnesses and injuries (OIIs), which have been associated with increases during heatwaves. This study estimated retrospective and projected future heatwave-attributable OIIs and their costs in Australia. Climate and workers' compensation claims data were extracted from seven Australian capital cities representing OIIs from July 2005 to June 2018. Heatwaves were defined using the Excess Heat Factor. OIIs and associated costs were estimated separately per city and pooled to derive national estimates. Results were projected to 2030 (2016–2045) and 2050 (2036–2065). The risk of OIIs and associated costs increased during heatwaves, with the risk increasing during severe and particularly extreme heatwaves. Of all OIIs, 0.13% (95% empirical confidence interval [eCI]: 0.11–0.16%) were heatwave-attributable, equivalent to 120 (95%eCI:70–181) OIIs annually. 0.25% of costs were heatwave-attributable (95%eCI: 0.18–0.34%), equal to $AU4.3 (95%eCI: 1.4–7.4) million annually. Estimates of heatwave-attributable OIIs by 2050, under Representative Concentration Pathway [RCP]4.5 and RCP8.5, were 0.17% (95%eCI: 0.10–0.27%) and 0.23% (95%eCI: 0.13–0.37%), respectively. National costs estimates for 2030 under RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 were 0.13% (95%eCI: 0.27-0.46%) and 0.04% (95%eCI: 0.66-0.60), respectively. These estimates for extreme heatwaves were 0.04% (95%eCI: 0.02–0.06%) and 0.04% (95%eCI: 0.01–0.07), respectively. Cost-AFs in 2050 were, under RCP4.5, 0.127% (95%eCI: 0.27-0.46) for all heatwaves and 0.04% (95%eCI: 0.01-0.09%) for extreme heatwaves. Attributable fractions were approximately similar to baseline when assuming theoretical climate adaptation. Heatwaves represent notable and preventable portions of preventable OIIs and economic burden. OIIs are likely to increase in the future, and costs during extreme heatwaves in 2030. Workplace and public health policies aimed at heat adaptation can reduce heat-attributable morbidity and costs. [Display omitted] • Limited research on expenses from work injuries and illnesses during heatwaves. • Assessment of heatwave-attributable occupational injuries, illnesses and costs. • Increased injuries and illnesses during heatwaves both retrospectively and future. • Costs increased during heatwaves, with some evidence for projected increases. • Climate adaptation can potentially reduce occupational burden. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00139351
Volume :
236
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Environmental Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
172849351
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2023.116852