Litcius/Paper detail

Social connection as a public health adaptation to extreme heat events

Amani Kafeety, Sarah B. Henderson, Amy A. Lubik, Jesse Kancir, Tom Kosatsky, Michael Schwandt

2020Canadian Journal of Public Health64 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Climate change is an increasingly important public health issue, reflected in morbidity and mortality outcomes during extreme heat events. At the same time, the harms of social isolation with respect to a wide range of health outcomes are becoming better understood. Given that older adults are at higher risk during hot weather and at higher risk of social isolation, they are among those at highest risk for adverse impacts of extreme heat events. While specific strategies to reduce heat exposure have been described in the literature and promoted in public health practice, these may not be readily available to socially isolated older adults. As such, it is crucial to identify key approaches to address risk due to social isolation in the aging population, and to acknowledge their limitations and barriers. Interventions rooted in social connection, a concept widely applied in interventions for public health and social well-being, should be applied as a tool for adaptation to extreme heat events.

Topics & Concepts

Social isolationPsychological interventionPublic healthIsolation (microbiology)Political scienceMedicineNursingBiologyPsychiatryMicrobiologyClimate Change and Health ImpactsHealth disparities and outcomesThermoregulation and physiological responses