Litcius/Paper detail

Internet searches and heat-related emergency department visits in the United States

Quinn H. Adams, Yuantong Sun, Shengzhi Sun, Gregory A. Wellenius

2022Scientific Reports16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Emerging research suggests that internet search patterns may provide timely, actionable insights into adverse health impacts from, and behavioral responses to, days of extreme heat, but few studies have evaluated this hypothesis, and none have done so across the United States. We used two-stage distributed lag nonlinear models to quantify the interrelationships between daily maximum ambient temperature, internet search activity as measured by Google Trends, and heat-related emergency department (ED) visits among adults with commercial health insurance in 30 US metropolitan areas during the warm seasons (May to September) from 2016 to 2019. Maximum daily temperature was positively associated with internet searches relevant to heat, and searches were in turn positively associated with heat-related ED visits. Moreover, models combining internet search activity and temperature had better predictive ability for heat-related ED visits compared to models with temperature alone. These results suggest that internet search patterns may be useful as a leading indicator of heat-related illness or stress.

Topics & Concepts

Emergency departmentThe InternetHeat illnessExtreme heatHeat stressMetropolitan areaMedicineLagComputer scienceGeographyClimate changeWorld Wide WebBiologyPsychiatryMeteorologyEcologyPathologyAnimal scienceComputer networkClimate Change and Health ImpactsAir Quality and Health ImpactsHealth disparities and outcomes