Vulnerable, Resilient, or Both? A Qualitative Study of Adaptation Resources and Behaviors to Heat Waves and Health Outcomes of Low-Income Residents of Urban Heat Islands
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“Adaptive capacity is a common component of vulnerability and resilience assessments, depending on how these concepts are framed, but the isolated measuring and modeling of adaptive capacity is not as advanced as the broader concepts (e.g., vulnerability, resilience). Although several scholars are trying to frame and quantify this ability of adapting to actual and future events, there is still very little consensus as to what constitutes effective and adaptive adaptation, and therefore little agreement about models and indicators to measure it”.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Participants
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Participant Demographics
3.2. Threat Assessment of Future Heat Waves
“Yes, yes. That’s why I’m constantly watching, because I know that the hotter it gets, the more pollutants. And although we do not perceive them, we go up here on a level. We have CO2, nitrogen, in other words, pollutants that can affect our health. That’s why I’m also looking at air quality, because whether it’s hot or cold, it’s going to influence pollutants. And since we go outside, we can be more exposed.”
3.3. Heat Wave Adaptation Resources
“They don’t want us to do any kinds of arrangements, or, you know, make any holes on the walls anything like that, so we just avoid any issues.”
“Maybe because I’m from Guangdung, the heat in our region is relatively humid, and the whole body is sweaty when it’s hot. Because it feels like the heat here is better.”
“Uh, we don’t usually like to use air conditioners, because it’s not good for our health. In fact, we only turn it on when we feel very hot, usually before going to bed.”
“I have relatives in the inland empire, so it tends, it kind of tends to get a little bit hotter than here. And we will check up on each other, you know talk about the weather hot, it is when we’ve been waiting stay cool if they have central AC you know what sometimes I think that one night we actually stayed over their house, because it was much, much cooler than here. Yeah, so that’s, that’s pretty much what we would do as far as checking in on each other.”
“I guess growing up in the city and in school, like having adults, you know, hearing my parents and hearing other adults say, you know, say we’re staying inside because of the air quality or because it’s hot. Don’t exert yourself. Don’t overdo anything right now and, I think I’ve just learned by, I guess, by like the directions of adults growing up.”
“Oh, we were going out to the park. We went to the park a lot. We also used to go out like this. Eh? Where there is a place that my husband drive us to? He drives farther than I do. There’s a place you can ride bicycles and we bring food. We took a sheet with us so we could lie down on the grass and be there, that is, in the open air. I think that sometimes it was cooler under a tree than in the house. So what we used to do was that I would take them with their backpacks. I tell them to take their backpacks to do their homework, because they will concentrate more there. In other words, we are all going to do homework together and we can be there as a family, enjoying a snack. I would bring sandwiches and I would take what I could. In the park as well we tried to go where there weren’t too many people just because sometimes there would be many people and also a lot of noise. My husband knows several parks, so we would go under the biggest trees, with the biggest shade to be able to be quiet, to enjoy, to be calm and that is what helped us a lot.”
“When I was with my child’s dad, he was working in construction, and he suffered a heat stroke. He had a heatstroke and he practically woke up in the sun on his job because he works outdoors. And he got a heatstroke that day and it gave him a headache and everything. And that’s why we know they have to drink a lot of water or if they suffer from heatstroke, they have to take a lot of Pedialyte and rest to recover.”
“I’m in the parent center at my children’s school. So there’s like first aid, the parents who are on the board give us like, ah, like basic information about what we have to do, like when we are helping as volunteers in the school, in the playgrounds or in the dining area or on vacations.”
“I only heard it from the news. But I don’t exactly know if it was from the news or the phone about the weather. That’s what I’ve been hearing on the radio. It’s going to be very hot or something.”
“Yes, from the news we get to watch at night. It’s how we inform ourselves.”
“Yes, because they put it on the platforms: Facebook or Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat, the newscasts announce it by time, that it’s going to be a very big heat wave, fires or it’s going to be very strong air and all that. What is it called? Expands more the heat or it’s dry area, pure steam like, like, like desert-like? No, dry?”
3.4. Heat Wave Adaptation Behaviors
“We for the kids, we just did like, you know, try to do like water balloons when it wasn’t too hot outside. We wouldn’t go out during the middle of the day. Then that was just, you know, trying to stay cool inside and wearing a short-sleeved clothes or shorts, trying to keep the doors closed when it was, you know, trying to keep the cool air in and then windows open at night, trying to get some ventilation in. But I mean, other than that, we were trying to go like into the mall. We tried to do like water activities, but no other than that, no.”
3.5. Health Effects of Heat Waves
4. Discussion
4.1. Risk of Heatwaves
4.2. Responses to Heat Waves
4.3. Heat Wave Adaptation Resources
4.4. Heat Wave Adaptation Results
4.5. Vulnerability or Resilience
4.6. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristic | Mean | S.D. | Range | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age | 42.18 | 7.4 | 30–68 | |||
Median household income (USD) | 49,358 | 15,261 | 30,530–100,866 | |||
Years in neighborhood | 14.94 | 9.57 | 2–47 | |||
Urban heat index | 7229.71 | 5706.56 | 1627.1–30,679.8 | |||
Gender | Number | Percentage | ||||
Female | 39 | 97.5 | ||||
Male | 1 | 2.5 | ||||
Education | ||||||
<HS | 9 | 22.5 | ||||
HS | 16 | 40.0 | ||||
Post-secondary/college | 15 | 37.5 | ||||
Employed outside the home | 23 | 57.5 | ||||
Race/Ethnicity | ||||||
Asian | 9 | 22.5 | ||||
Latinx | 27 | 67.5 | ||||
African American | 1 | 2.5 | ||||
White | 3 | 7.5 | ||||
Place of residence | ||||||
Own | 11 | 27.5 | ||||
Rent | 29 | 72.5 | ||||
Air conditioners in home | 25 | 62.5 | ||||
Central air conditioning | 7 | 17.5 | ||||
Window units | 10 | 25 | ||||
Portable units | 6 | 15 | ||||
Mini-split units | 2 | 5 | ||||
Fans in bedroom | 24 | 60 | ||||
Fans in other rooms | 7 | 17.5 | ||||
Contact by social network | 10 | 25 | ||||
Received warning in advance of heat wave | 32 | 80 |
Code | N | Illustrative Quotes |
---|---|---|
Trend in past 10 years | 38 | “I think in my own opinion that there’s more.” |
Reason for increase | ||
Environmental contaminants | 15 | “I really don’t know where to recycle my phone, yes there are boxes in various malls and all that, but there are people who say oh, where do I recycle my phone and they throw the batteries in the trash. All that is contaminating since one of the smallest piles contaminates almost 20 L of water. If you throw it in the sea, then. Then I say, wow!” |
Global warming/Climate change | 10 | “Yeah, totally. I mean, it’s global warming. It’s frickin science like um, yeah. Our sea levels are rising, you know, and with all the gases, the greenhouse gases we’re admitting into like our atmosphere now that traps heat in.” |
Deforestation and less green space | 10 | “In the past there were many more trees, even one in each house, but lately they are being cut down. Why? We do not know. Perhaps because the houses are not well given or because. I don’t know yet, because here in our community the trees were previously larger. Lately they are being cut smaller.” |
Air pollution | 6 | “I think that the atmosphere is undergoing changes because of. For all the chemicals. All that pollution that sometimes companies. Or even oneself littering. We are destroying the environment and that is why. That we are already are already feeling it. And I feel that’s why the ozone layer is increasingly sending stronger and stronger sun rays.” |
Lack of concern for environment | 6 | “In other words, sometimes I believe that we are the ones who are destroying our own planet in some way, that we are not taking care of it and that above all we are not teaching our children how to take care of things. So, in that way I think we are affecting the planet, like when sometimes we say why did it get so hot or why is this happening, or why. But we must first start at home. I mean, for example, I didn’t know that eggshells or banana peels could be recycled.” |
Overpopulation | 5 | “You know, there’s a lot of more like people like, everybody is driving in their cars every day and stuff like that, so I feel like all of that, like has an impact on that.” |
Wildfires | 3 | “All the fires have been going on. I feel like there’s been so many more every single year. And it’s just, you know, it’s the pollution is just making it so much more hard.” |
Dependence on fossil fuels | 2 | “I know global warming, I know with the emissions. You know it’s not helping anything. I know specifically with the different things that we’ve done in the classroom that although we are solar and wind and we’re trying to do all these things, we’re still super dependable on fossil fuels.” |
New technology | 2 | “You know, there’s a lot a lot of pollution. There is a lot of new technology that is making it worse. One of those you know that we’re building stuff.” |
Anticipated health problems | 33 | “Physical because if the body is not hydrated, then what is going to happen there? Will you hemorrhage? The kidneys are not going to start working? Internal organs? And that will create health problems in the physical part. In the mental part, since the brain is not sufficiently hydrated, what is going to happen? It is not going to start working. People will have hallucinations and then there will be cases of violence, irritation, dehydration.” “So you see. The elderly and children are the most affected. Ah, yes, heat waves affect them the most. Well, asthma and asthma when people have asthma and the heat, the pollution, all the air, well, that is what goes directly to the lungs and that is what affects them a lot. And then dehydration as well. If you do not hydrate older people or one with children who do not give enough fluid, it can also dehydrate people.” |
Concerns about children | 13 | “Well, my kids sweat a lot. And they get, you know, they get. I guess I call them like they’re extra warm blooded. So, I know I am to worry about if they’re getting water at school, if they’re staying cool, if they’re being provided additional shade at school or they’re being provided cold water or whatnot. So, I do worry about that if I’m not with them.” |
Strategy | N | Illustrative Quotes |
---|---|---|
Stay hydrated | 40 | “So, we spend the whole day drinking so as not to get dehydrated, because sometimes at night when we sweat we feel that we are dehydrated too. And although we are in the house and all that, but we feel from that not to say we are ok. I drink a lot of water with lemon.” |
Seek medical attention | 31 | “Well, first thing, I think, is make sure I have enough fluids, and if I start feeling dizzy call for help, or call a neighbor or family member. And if it really is bad call 911.” |
Go someplace cooler | 27 | “I take my girls to the park, or they are on swim teams. So, we hardly suffered from being in here and feeling the heat. We spent it in parks. So, wherever you go to get the swimming lesson there is a park and that’s where we spent most of the heat waves.” |
Keeping cool | 22 | “Also, take a bath with cool water, right? If it is very hot, suffocating, it’s like putting them the bathtub and cooling off or being outdoors in the shade.” “We do, I will sometimes like wet paper towels, they can put it on top of their forehead.” |
AC use | 22 | “Well, I think that what we have to do is to prepare ourselves with more water and if we need air conditioning on those days, because sometimes if it is very hot at night, we can’t stand it.” |
Limited AC use | 19 | “We try to save as much energy as possible. So the rule we had to put an air conditioner was that we were only going to put it on when it was already over 90 or when it is hot and we only use it at night from 09:30 to cool down a little and cool the house a little and then we turn it off to sleep later” “Usually, I only use it to cool down and then I turn it off. And no longer because as my husband is very sensitive about it being too cold indoors and the children go outside, and it harms them, and they get sick. So, we almost never wanted to get used to using the air conditioning.” |
Avoid going outside | 19 | “The normal thing is that the same thing that if there’s a lot of heat, to stay inside the house.” |
Household modifications | 17 | “And not using the washing machine, the dryers, the stoves. To make you feel more, cooler and. And we are not expending too much energy.” “Yes, we tried to always ventilate the rooms, open the windows, change the sheets because sometimes it is that the bedspreads are somewhat thick. Put sheets, fresh sheet apart from the windows. The fans, try to clean them just because also they are dusty or not accessible. They also don’t give a lot of air. Also try to have more space, not to have everything saturated, try to have everything clean, sweeping, mopping, because it is also like the floor is cooler too.” “We took different steps, we planted trees around to create a little more shade in the house, but not the trees as the dryness makes them lose hydration and no, you don’t feel any air.” |
Clothing | 15 | “And here in the house when it is very hot, try to be in shorts, in shorts, in a cooler t-shirt.” “I prepared with the children. We take the clothes, because when they are too hot, we wet them and then we put them on wet, or we fill with spray bottles. And I also sprinkled water on my children with fresh water.” |
Nutritional practices | 15 | “That’s when you know you don’t want to stuff yourself with pork belly stew or something like that, right? You want to eat a lot of, you know, smoothies, shakes, and, you know, vegetables and lean meats right?” “No, no, and then also we do a lot of shakes during the summer to keep ourselves cold. And you know store ice cream.” “You know, eat some cool stuff like watermelon and things like that.” “Chinese people like to cook tea with cooling effects. It helps to clear the heat.” |
Code | N | Illustrative Quotes |
---|---|---|
Physical health | 23 | |
Fatigue/lethargy | 7 | “Tired. The heat kind of tires you out. Well, children are lethargic when they are asleep and every now and then because of the heat.” |
Headaches | 4 | “Well, when it’s the hot season, it gives me a lot of headaches.” |
Rashes | 4 | “So for me personally, the effect that the heat had on me was it made my eczema kind of really come out and it was just really uncomfortable.” |
Difficulty breathing | 2 | “Yes, when it’s hot, I feel that my breathing is not very good.” |
Loss of appetite | 2 | “My appetite is not very good.” |
Physical discomfort | 2 | “Okay, so in terms of like your health and well-being it was mostly just physically uncomfortable. You know feeling sweaty and gross…” |
Nosebleeds | 2 | “My girl or my child, what my girl suffers a lot in hot weather is that she bleeds a lot from her nose, she does get much blood in her nose. And then at that time, the times when it was very hot, I was very worried because she was losing a lot of blood, so I went to the doctor with her pediatrician and I told him, look, this is happening, and he told me that it is normal because of the heat wave.” |
Dry throat | 1 | “Yes, there are also four of us. The two children, my husband and me. Yes, there were changes in that time of hot weather. In the throat, that is what affects us the most. Because it is very dry. Very dry, very dry. And our throats get dry.” |
Flashes | 1 | “I got a lot of flashes.” |
Cracked lips | 1 | “Cracked lips were seen in my children and me. So that implied that we needed to hydrate more.” |
Swollen feet | 1 | “Well, you know, when it’s so hot I know my feet is getting swelling.” |
Mental health | 29 | |
Anxiety | 19 | |
Due to uncertainty | 3 | “Especially the anxiety and not knowing what tomorrow is going to be like, whether it is going to be a day when you can stand the heat, or it is going to be a day when you are going to have to be indoors, or it is going to be a day when you have to go somewhere else to feel cool. That gives anxiety. And anxiety also comes to take away sleep, to take away hunger, to take away from focusing on what one should be focused on. So that brings with it many more diseases and now we see more common diabetes, obesity, emotional uncontrol and we think that right now as a mother I was thinking that it is the pandemic, but if we can see with my children, I can see that my child since he was three years old told me ‘Mommy, why, is it so hot?’ And next year it will be like that. So, if my three-year-old is asking me these questions, it is because mentally it is already affecting him.” |
Due to confinement | 3 | “It would make me anxious not to be able to go out.” |
Due to concern for children | 7 | “Not for me personally, but for my children, because they wanted to go outside to play. Then they felt a little frustrated at not being able to go out and play.” |
Due to poor health | 1 | “Um, people with diabetes, because I’m diabetic so, I noticed that, now that I’m turning older, I’m more prone to feeling anxious about the heat. And, especially when there’s high humidity with the heat that that seems to debilitate me.” |
Due to desperation | 4 | “More anxious because, well, the heat does make you desperate.” |
Due to poor quality of life | 1 | “And so I think just the quality of life goes down so much with heat, and especially for people without air conditioning, and people, you know their parents might be more frustrated and not treat them as well, different things like that that.” |
Depression | 7 | “It kind of dampened our spirits with so much heat. There was no desire to do anything.” |
Anger/irritability | 3 | “I don’t know, I never liked it. Always when there is heat, I get more of a temper.” |
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Palinkas, L.A.; Hurlburt, M.S.; Fernandez, C.; De Leon, J.; Yu, K.; Salinas, E.; Garcia, E.; Johnston, J.; Rahman, M.M.; Silva, S.J.; et al. Vulnerable, Resilient, or Both? A Qualitative Study of Adaptation Resources and Behaviors to Heat Waves and Health Outcomes of Low-Income Residents of Urban Heat Islands. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 11090. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191711090
Palinkas LA, Hurlburt MS, Fernandez C, De Leon J, Yu K, Salinas E, Garcia E, Johnston J, Rahman MM, Silva SJ, et al. Vulnerable, Resilient, or Both? A Qualitative Study of Adaptation Resources and Behaviors to Heat Waves and Health Outcomes of Low-Income Residents of Urban Heat Islands. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(17):11090. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191711090
Chicago/Turabian StylePalinkas, Lawrence A., Michael S. Hurlburt, Cecilia Fernandez, Jessenia De Leon, Kexin Yu, Erika Salinas, Erika Garcia, Jill Johnston, Md. Mostafijur Rahman, Sam J. Silva, and et al. 2022. "Vulnerable, Resilient, or Both? A Qualitative Study of Adaptation Resources and Behaviors to Heat Waves and Health Outcomes of Low-Income Residents of Urban Heat Islands" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 17: 11090. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191711090
APA StylePalinkas, L. A., Hurlburt, M. S., Fernandez, C., De Leon, J., Yu, K., Salinas, E., Garcia, E., Johnston, J., Rahman, M. M., Silva, S. J., & McConnell, R. S. (2022). Vulnerable, Resilient, or Both? A Qualitative Study of Adaptation Resources and Behaviors to Heat Waves and Health Outcomes of Low-Income Residents of Urban Heat Islands. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(17), 11090. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191711090