COLUMBUS, Ohio – Severe heat waves kill more
people in neighborhoods where there are few inviting businesses to draw older
people out of their apartments, new research suggests. A study of the 1995 heat
wave in Chicago found higher-than-average mortality rates in areas where
businesses were run-down, and dominated by liquor stores and bars.
While other studies had shown that elderly
people in low-income neighborhoods were most at risk of dying in a heat wave,
this research shows what it is about some disadvantaged areas that leave
residents more vulnerable, said Christopher Browning, lead author of the study
and associate professor of sociology at Ohio State University.
“The neighborhoods with the highest mortality
rates were less likely to have stores or other businesses where older people
felt comfortable going to, even in the worst heat,” Browning said. “They stayed
bunkered in their apartments where they were most at risk for heat-related
illnesses that led to death.”
Browning conducted the study with Kathleen
Cagney, assistant professor in the Department of Health Studies, and Danielle
Wallace, a doctoral student, both at the University of Chicago; and Seth
Feinberg, an assistant professor at Western Washington University. Their results
will be published in the August issue of the American Sociological
Review.
“Previous research has focused on the lack of
city services or the lack of neighbors checking on neighbors,” Cagney
said. “Both are important, but our research indicates that the neighborhood
infrastructure itself could be implicated.”
Nearly 800 people in Chicago, mostly elderly
folks living alone, died during one week in the midst of a July 1995 heat
wave. During several days that week, the temperature was over 100, with a heat
index on July 13 of 126.
The researchers used several data sets to
explore how neighborhood conditions in Chicago were linked to mortality during
that heat wave. They found, as expected, that most of the heat-related deaths
occurred in lower-income neighborhoods, even after taking into account factors
such as race.
“It was the fact that these residents were
poorer that left them most vulnerable,” Browning said.
Factors that are often linked to low-income
neighborhoods – such as higher crime and murder rates, more fear of crime,
visible signs of disorder such as graffiti – did not show as strong a link to
heat wave mortality as did the condition and type of businesses in the
neighborhoods.
“These neighborhoods were in commercial
decline,” Browning said. “A lot of the businesses were boarded-up, or in poor
condition. Those that were left were bars and liquor stores, or youth-oriented
places that would not attract elderly customers. These businesses didn’t promote
an environment where people felt comfortable walking around, and older people
were probably fearful to walk into some of these places.”
But the results showed that these neighborhoods
in commercial decline were not linked to higher mortality rates during July
weeks in other years – it was only during the heat wave of 1995.
“On a general basis, it was probably good for
their safety that elderly residents avoided being out in these neighborhoods,”
he said. “They learned to adapt to conditions in which they spent a lot of time
in their apartments, but during a heat wave this left them vulnerable.”
In other findings using the same data sets,
Browning, Cagney and colleagues found that residents in low-income neighborhoods
did better when they lived in areas with a high level of what they called
“collective efficacy.” Collective efficacy is the extent to which people in a
community trust one another, help each other and feel responsible for one
another.
But when it came to the 1995 heat wave, elderly
residents didn’t fare better even whey they lived in neighborhoods high in
collective efficacy.
“We think that neighbors just didn’t realize
how vulnerable the elderly were while this heat wave was going on. More people
would probably have helped, but they just didn’t know. The impact didn’t become
clear until it was too late,” he said.
How best to intervene when a heat wave
occurs? “We can certainly take action in the moment, by knocking on doors of
older residents, but we can also think more broadly about the types of
communities that facilitate relief from the heat. A focus on enriching the
commercial sector may ultimately result in a greater number of lives saved,”
Cagney said.
The results of the study suggest that the
elderly in these declining neighborhoods may be at risk during other types of
disasters as well, according to Browning.
“When these people see their own neighborhood
as a risk, they may discount the more uncertain danger of a potential disaster,”
Browning said.
The research was supported by grants from the
National Institute on Aging and the National Institutes of Health’s Office of
Behavioral and Social Science Research.
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