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Ośrodek Badań nad Migracjami

Małgorzata Wrotek, Iulia Marginean, Zofia Boni, Franciszek Chwałczyk, Ana M. Vicedo-Cabrera, Coral Salvador, Barbara Jancewicz. 2025.

From inequalities to vulnerability paradoxes: juxtaposing older adults’ heat mortality risk and heat experiences

 

Environmental Health 24 (2025)

Nowa publikacja z projektu EmCliC – Doświadczanie zmian klimatycznych. Transdyscyplinarne badanie przegrzewania miast

https://ehjournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12940-025-01179-2

https://doi.org/10.1186/s12940-025-01179-2

 


Abstrakt

Background Increasing temperatures across the globe, including in Europe, pose one of the biggest threats to human health and wellbeing. Different kinds of inequalities, determined by age, sex/gender, isolation, socio-economic status, occupation, living in the city, and health situation, create vulnerability factors influencing people’s heat-related mortality risk and their daily experiences during summer. Methods Our study uses an interdisciplinary approach to research how intersecting inequalities generate vulnerabilities to heat stress among older adults (65+) in two European cities: Warsaw and Madrid. We combine three methodological approaches juxtaposing quantitative and qualitative data: (1) epidemiological analysis that uses daily mortality data in Warsaw and Madrid coupled with meteorological station temperature data from HadISD; (2) the OLS regression based on the survey conducted in Warsaw and Madrid in 2022; and (3) the focus group interviews conducted in Warsaw in 2021. Results Our data confirms that good health and financial situation protect people both from mortality risk and negative heat experiences. Interestingly, both air conditioning (A/C) usage and being physically active increase the negative heat experiences people reported. Finally, we identified two vulnerability paradoxes understood as situations when a person or a group might be more at risk but not experience or perceive negative impacts of heat. These paradoxes affect the oldest adults (80+) and older people living alone in both cities. Conclusions Studies on vulnerability and adaptation need to incorporate both large scale top-down data sets and bottom-up, localized data based on individual experience. Combining various methods and disciplinary approaches enables identification of inequality factors and vulnerability paradoxes that remain unnoticed or underestimated while increasing people’s vulnerability to heat stress.

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