Effects of hourly precipitation and temperature on ambulance response time.

Environ Res

State Key Laboratory of Organ Failure Research, Department of Biostatistics, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Tropical Disease Research, School of Public Health, Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, 510515, China. Electronic address:

Published: February 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how weather factors like precipitation and temperature affect ambulance response times (ART) in Shenzhen, China, analyzing data from over 779,000 emergency records between 2010-2016.
  • A significant finding is that a 1 mm increase in hourly precipitation delays ART by about 9 seconds, with effects lasting up to 5 hours, while specific temperature thresholds also contribute to delays—1.68 seconds for temperatures below 19°C and 2.44 seconds for temperatures above 24°C.
  • The research highlights that ART is particularly impacted by weather conditions and call volumes, emphasizing the need for policies to address these issues for better public health outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: Longer ambulance response time (ART) delaying treatment would worsen conditions of seriously ill or injured patients, but limited evidence is available on the effects of weather factors on ART. This study aims to assess precipitation- and temperature-ART associations and their potential lagged effects using a novel modeling strategy.

Methods: Based on 779,156 emergency records during 2010-2016 from the whole population in Shenzhen, China, we creatively combined quantile regression with distributed-lag nonlinear models to examine the non-linear and lagged effects of hourly precipitation and temperature on ART at the 50th and 90th percentiles.

Results: A linear precipitation-ART association with a delay of 9.01 (95%CI, 7.82-10.20) seconds at median ART for a 1 mm increase in hourly precipitation, and the effects lasted for 5 h with the greatest effect at the current hour. A two linear thresholds temperature-ART association revealed 1 °C decrease below 19 °C caused 1.68 (95%CI, 0.92-2.44) seconds delay in total ART over lag 0-7 h, and 1 °C increase above 24 °C caused 2.44 (95%CI, 1.55-3.33) seconds delay. The hourly call volumes exceeding 54 calls caused 8.79 (95%CI, 8.71-8.86) seconds delay in total ART for 1 more call, but not affected the effects of weather factors. The internal ART suffered more from the hourly call volumes, while the external ART suffered more from precipitation and temperature. The effects were apparently greater on ART at the 90th percentile than median.

Conclusions: Precipitation and temperature are independent risk factors for ambulance services performance, and their lagged effects are notable. The external ART and patients with long ART are vulnerable. More attention should be paid to weather and ART, and these findings may have implications for effective policies to reduce ART to protect public health.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2019.108946DOI Listing

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