--- - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: "Peng, Roger D.\rBobb, Jennifer F.\rTebaldi, Claudia\rMcDaniel, Larry\rBell, Michelle L.\rDominici, Francesca" DOI: 10.1289/ehp.1002430 Date: May ISSN: 0091-6765 Issue: 5 Journal: Environmental Health Perspectives Pages: 701-706 Title: Toward a quantitative estimate of future heat wave mortality under global climate change URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3094424/ Volume: 119 Year: 2011 _chapter: '["Ch. 9: Human Health FINAL","Ch. 18: Midwest FINAL"]' _record_number: 2461 _uuid: b3760069-032c-4bb6-9d34-9771c08f0171 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1289/ehp.1002430 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b3760069-032c-4bb6-9d34-9771c08f0171.yaml identifier: b3760069-032c-4bb6-9d34-9771c08f0171 uri: /reference/b3760069-032c-4bb6-9d34-9771c08f0171 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'McMichael, A. J.' Author Address: 'National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia. tony.mcmichael@anu.edu.au' DOI: 10.1056/NEJMra1109341 Date: Apr 4 ISSN: 1533-4406 Issue: 14 Journal: New England Journal of Medicine Keywords: Climate Change; Environment; Health; Humans; Internationality; Population Growth; Urbanization Language: eng Notes: 'McMichael, Anthony J United States N Engl J Med. 2013 Apr 4;368(14):1335-43. doi: 10.1056/NEJMra1109341.' Pages: 1335-1343 Title: 'Globalization, climate change, and human health' Volume: 368 Year: 2013 _record_number: 4825 _uuid: b3a14272-c3f4-4226-a196-afc0d0992306 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1056/NEJMra1109341 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b3a14272-c3f4-4226-a196-afc0d0992306.yaml identifier: b3a14272-c3f4-4226-a196-afc0d0992306 uri: /reference/b3a14272-c3f4-4226-a196-afc0d0992306 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: "BACKGROUND: Diarrhea accounts for many hospitalizations and outpatient clinic visits among children. American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) children have experienced a greater infectious disease burden compared with the general U.S. population of children, although diarrhea-associated hospitalization rates have declined among AI/AN children. METHODS: Hospital discharge and outpatient visit records with a diagnosis indicating a diarrhea-associated diagnosis were evaluated for AI/AN children <5 years of age, using the 2000-2004 Indian Health Service Direct and Contract Health Service Inpatient Data and outpatient visit data from the Indian Health Service National Patient Information Reporting System, and for the general U.S. population of children <5 years of age using the Kids' Inpatient Database for 2003 and National Ambulatory data for 2000-2004. RESULTS: For 2000-2004, the diarrhea-associated hospitalization rate was similar for AI/AN children and U.S. children <5 years of age (65.9 and 79.3 of 10,000, respectively), but the rate among AI/AN infants was nearly twice the rate among U.S. infants (262.6 and 154.7 of 10,000, respectively). The rate of diarrhea-associated outpatient visits among AI/AN children was higher than for U.S. children (2255.4 versus 1647.9 of 10,000, respectively), as a result of the high rate among AI/AN infants compared with U.S. infants (6103.5 and 2956.3 of 10,000, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Although the diarrhea-associated hospitalization rate in AI/AN children <5 years old has declined to levels comparable with that of all U.S. children, the rate for AI/AN in infants remains higher than for U.S. infants. The diarrhea-associated outpatient visit rate for AI/AN children was higher than for U.S. children. Ongoing evaluation of hospitalization and outpatient data is important to understand the impact of rotavirus vaccine among AI/AN children." Author: 'Singleton, R. J.; Holman, R. C.; Yorita, K. L.; Holve, S.; Paisano, E. L.; Steiner, C. A.; Glass, R. I.; Cheek, J. E.' DOI: 10.1097/INF.0b013e3181256595 Date: Nov ISSN: 0891-3668 Issue: 11 Journal: The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal Keywords: 'Alaska/epidemiology; Child, Preschool; Diarrhea/diagnosis/*epidemiology/ethnology/etiology; Hospitalization/*statistics & numerical data; Humans; Indians, North American/*statistics & numerical data; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Inuits/*statistics & numerical data; Outpatients/*statistics & numerical data; Seasons; United States/epidemiology/ethnology; United States Indian Health Service/statistics & numerical data' Language: eng Notes: 'Singleton, Rosalyn J Holman, Robert C Yorita, Krista L Holve, Steve Paisano, Edna L Steiner, Claudia A Glass, Roger I Cheek, James E Journal Article United States Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2007 Nov;26(11):1006-13.' Pages: 1006-1013 Title: 'Diarrhea-associated hospitalizations and outpatient visits among American Indian and Alaska Native children younger than five years of age, 2000-2004' Volume: 26 Year: 2007 _record_number: 19091 _uuid: b3a85649-d743-4287-b1e9-c625c593d6df reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1097/INF.0b013e3181256595 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b3a85649-d743-4287-b1e9-c625c593d6df.yaml identifier: b3a85649-d743-4287-b1e9-c625c593d6df uri: /reference/b3a85649-d743-4287-b1e9-c625c593d6df - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Fiore, Arlene M.; Naik, Vaishali; Leibensperger, Eric M.' DOI: 10.1080/10962247.2015.1040526 ISSN: 2162-2906 Issue: 6 Journal: Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association Pages: 645-685 Title: Air quality and climate connections Volume: 65 Year: 2015 _record_number: 19147 _uuid: b4038a28-b14b-4ae8-b783-0de19e3cffdd reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1080/10962247.2015.1040526 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b4038a28-b14b-4ae8-b783-0de19e3cffdd.yaml identifier: b4038a28-b14b-4ae8-b783-0de19e3cffdd uri: /reference/b4038a28-b14b-4ae8-b783-0de19e3cffdd - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Hicks, Lauri A.; Garrison, Laurel E.; Nelson, George E.; Hampton, Lee M.' ISSN: 1545-861X Issue: 32 Journal: Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report PMID: 21849965 Pages: 1083-1086 Title: 'Legionellosis --- United States, 2000-2009' URL: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6032a3.htm Volume: 60 Year: 2011 _record_number: 16509 _uuid: b42d3ad4-eb25-4bda-8f58-e42ff4d35808 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/pmid-21849965 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b42d3ad4-eb25-4bda-8f58-e42ff4d35808.yaml identifier: b42d3ad4-eb25-4bda-8f58-e42ff4d35808 uri: /reference/b42d3ad4-eb25-4bda-8f58-e42ff4d35808 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Futch, J. Carrie; Griffin, Dale W.; Banks, Kenneth; Lipp, Erin K.' DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2011.08.046 Date: 11// ISSN: 0025-326X Issue: 11 Journal: Marine Pollution Bulletin Keywords: Sewage; Coral reefs; Norovirus; Southeast Florida; Sponge; Inlets; Ocean outfalls Pages: 2308-2316 Title: Evaluation of sewage source and fate on southeast Florida coastal reefs Volume: 62 Year: 2011 _record_number: 19028 _uuid: b44dfd8b-0463-4612-8ebf-8b66869dac2e reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2011.08.046 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b44dfd8b-0463-4612-8ebf-8b66869dac2e.yaml identifier: b44dfd8b-0463-4612-8ebf-8b66869dac2e uri: /reference/b44dfd8b-0463-4612-8ebf-8b66869dac2e - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Lafferty, Kevin D.; Porter, James W.; Ford, Susan E.' DOI: 10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.35.021103.105704 ISSN: 1545-2069 Issue: 1 Journal: 'Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics' Pages: 31-54 Title: Are diseases increasing in the ocean? Volume: 35 Year: 2004 _chapter: Ch6 _record_number: 17917 _uuid: b47ee9e5-b2dc-420e-af18-dbe2f28036d2 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.35.021103.105704 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b47ee9e5-b2dc-420e-af18-dbe2f28036d2.yaml identifier: b47ee9e5-b2dc-420e-af18-dbe2f28036d2 uri: /reference/b47ee9e5-b2dc-420e-af18-dbe2f28036d2 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'The public health, tourism, fisheries, and ecosystem impacts from harmful algal blooms (HABs) have all increased over the past few decades. This has led to heightened scientific and regulatory attention, and the development of many new technologies and approaches for research and management. This, in turn, is leading to significant paradigm shifts with regard to, e.g., our interpretation of the phytoplankton species concept (strain variation), the dogma of their apparent cosmopolitanism, the role of bacteria and zooplankton grazing in HABs, and our approaches to investigating the ecological and genetic basis for the production of toxins and allelochemicals. Increasingly, eutrophication and climate change are viewed and managed as multifactorial environmental stressors that will further challenge managers of coastal resources and those responsible for protecting human health. Here we review HAB science with an eye toward new concepts and approaches, emphasizing, where possible, the unexpected yet promising new directions that research has taken in this diverse field.' Author: 'Anderson, D. M.; Cembella, A. D.; Hallegraeff, G. M.' DOI: 10.1146/annurev-marine-120308-081121 ISSN: 1941-0611 Issue: 1 Journal: Annual Review of Marine Science Keywords: Animals; Climate Change; Environmental Monitoring/ methods; Harmful Algal Bloom; Humans; Oceans and Seas; Research Design Language: eng Notes: "Anderson, Donald M Cembella, Allan D Hallegraeff, Gustaaf M 1-P50-ES012742/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. Review United States Ann Rev Mar Sci. 2012;4:143-76." Pages: 143-176 Title: 'Progress in understanding harmful algal blooms: Paradigm shifts and new technologies for research, monitoring, and management' Volume: 4 Year: 2012 _record_number: 4043 _uuid: b4b8411d-3670-43ec-a0a0-506018d910bd reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1146/annurev-marine-120308-081121 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b4b8411d-3670-43ec-a0a0-506018d910bd.yaml identifier: b4b8411d-3670-43ec-a0a0-506018d910bd uri: /reference/b4b8411d-3670-43ec-a0a0-506018d910bd - attrs: .reference_type: 16 Author: 'Frey, W' Date Published: 'August 31, 2011' Place Published: 'Washington, D.C.' Publisher: Brookings Institution Secondary Title: State of Metropolitan America Title: 'The New Metro Minority Map: Regional Shifts in Hispanics, Asians, and Blacks from Census 2010' URL: http://www.brookings.edu/papers/2011/0831_census_race_frey.aspx Year: 2011 _record_number: 18841 _uuid: b4cf60f6-c63d-4036-9610-d2cbab262c0e reftype: Web Page child_publication: /webpage/7cf89b02-0514-4113-91ea-66f96d94b098 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b4cf60f6-c63d-4036-9610-d2cbab262c0e.yaml identifier: b4cf60f6-c63d-4036-9610-d2cbab262c0e uri: /reference/b4cf60f6-c63d-4036-9610-d2cbab262c0e - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: "Schmidhuber, J.\rTubiello, F.N." DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0701976104 ISSN: 0027-8424 Issue: 50 Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Pages: 19703-19708 Title: Global food security under climate change URL: http://www.pnas.org/content/104/50/19703.full.pdf Volume: 104 Year: 2007 _chapter: '["Ch. 9: Human Health FINAL","Ch. 6: Agriculture FINAL"]' _record_number: 2773 _uuid: b4dfdd6a-ffce-44a3-b6b7-5770f5c70fbb reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1073/pnas.0701976104 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b4dfdd6a-ffce-44a3-b6b7-5770f5c70fbb.yaml identifier: b4dfdd6a-ffce-44a3-b6b7-5770f5c70fbb uri: /reference/b4dfdd6a-ffce-44a3-b6b7-5770f5c70fbb - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: "OBJECTIVE: To estimate the prevalence of serious emotional disturbance (SED) among children and adolescents exposed to Hurricane Katrina along with the associations of SED with hurricane-related stressors, sociodemographics, and family factors 18 to 27 months after the hurricane. METHOD: A probability sample of prehurricane residents of areas affected by Hurricane Katrina was administered a telephone survey. Respondents provided information on up to two of their children (n = 797) aged 4 to 17 years. The survey assessed hurricane-related stressors and lifetime history of psychopathology in respondents, screened for 12-month SED in respondents' children using the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire, and determined whether children's emotional and behavioral problems were attributable to Hurricane Katrina. RESULTS: The estimated prevalence of SED was 14.9%, and 9.3% of the youths were estimated to have SED that is directly attributable to Hurricane Katrina. Stress exposure was associated strongly with SED, and 20.3% of the youths with high stress exposure had hurricane-attributable SED. Death of a loved one had the strongest association with SED among prehurricane residents of New Orleans, whereas exposure to physical adversity had the strongest association in the remainder of the sample. Among children with stress exposure, parental psychopathology and poverty were associated with SED. CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of SED among youths exposed to Hurricane Katrina remains high 18 to 27 months after the storm, suggesting a substantial need for mental health treatment resources in the hurricane-affected areas. The youths who were exposed to hurricane-related stressors, have a family history of psychopathology, and have lower family incomes are at greatest risk for long-term psychiatric impairment." Author: 'McLaughlin, K. A.; Fairbank, J. A.; Gruber, M. J.; Jones, R. T.; Lakoma, M. D.; Pfefferbaum, B.; Sampson, N. A.; Kessler, R. C.' DOI: 10.1097/CHI.0b013e3181b76697 Date: Nov ISSN: 0890-8567 Issue: 11 Journal: Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Keywords: 'Adolescent; Affective Symptoms/diagnosis/*epidemiology/psychology; Alabama; Child; Child Behavior Disorders/diagnosis/*epidemiology/psychology; Child of Impaired Parents/psychology; Child, Preschool; Conduct Disorder/diagnosis/*epidemiology/psychology; Cross-Sectional Studies; *Cyclonic Storms; *Disasters; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Health Surveys; Humans; Life Change Events; Louisiana; Male; Mass Screening; Mississippi; New Orleans; Personality Assessment; Poverty/psychology/statistics & numerical data; Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/diagnosis/*epidemiology/psychology' Language: eng Notes: "1527-5418 McLaughlin, Katie A Fairbank, John A Gruber, Michael J Jones, Russell T Lakoma, Matthew D Pfefferbaum, Betty Sampson, Nancy A Kessler, Ronald C R01 MH070884/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United States R01 MH070884-01A2/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United States R01 MH081832/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United States Journal Article Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. United States J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2009 Nov;48(11):1069-78. doi: 10.1097/CHI.0b013e3181b76697." Pages: 1069-1078 Title: Serious emotional disturbance among youths exposed to Hurricane Katrina 2 years postdisaster Volume: 48 Year: 2009 _record_number: 18133 _uuid: b4f2cd34-8560-4f3f-9bdb-e51f36d0b97e reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1097/CHI.0b013e3181b76697 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b4f2cd34-8560-4f3f-9bdb-e51f36d0b97e.yaml identifier: b4f2cd34-8560-4f3f-9bdb-e51f36d0b97e uri: /reference/b4f2cd34-8560-4f3f-9bdb-e51f36d0b97e - attrs: .reference_type: 7 Author: "Moser, Susanne C.\rDavidson, Margaret A.\rKirshen, Paul\rMulvaney, Peter\rMurley, James F.\rNeumann, James E.\rPetes, Laura\rReed, Denise" Book Title: 'Climate Change Impacts in the United States: The Third National Climate Assessment' DOI: 10.7930/J0MS3QNW Editor: 'Melillo, Jerry M.; Richmond, Terese (T.C.); Yohe, Gary W.' Pages: 579-618 Place Published: 'Washington, DC' Publisher: U.S. Global Change Research Program Reviewer: b57bb0ca-4113-48b2-afd4-3f8fc5071034 Title: 'Ch. 25: Coastal Zone Development and Ecosystems' URL: http://nca2014.globalchange.gov/report/regions/coasts Year: 2014 _chapter: '["Ch. 0: About this Report FINAL"]' _record_number: 4735 _uuid: b57bb0ca-4113-48b2-afd4-3f8fc5071034 reftype: Book Section child_publication: /report/nca3/chapter/coastal-zone href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b57bb0ca-4113-48b2-afd4-3f8fc5071034.yaml identifier: b57bb0ca-4113-48b2-afd4-3f8fc5071034 uri: /reference/b57bb0ca-4113-48b2-afd4-3f8fc5071034 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Lewis, Lauren; Onsongo, Mary; Njapau, Henry; Schurz-Rogers, Helen; Luber, George; Kieszak, Stephanie; Nyamongo, Jack; Backer, Lorraine; Dahiye, Abdikher Mohamud; Misore, Ambrose; DeCock, Kevin; Rubin, Carol' DOI: 10.1289/ehp.7998 ISSN: 1552-9924 Issue: 12 Journal: Environmental Health Perspectives Pages: 1763-1767 Title: Aflatoxin contamination of commercial maize products during an outbreak of acute aflatoxicosis in eastern and central Kenya Volume: 113 Year: 2005 _chapter: Ch6 _record_number: 17921 _uuid: b58e652c-bb96-4518-87b1-3abc72550579 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1289/ehp.7998 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b58e652c-bb96-4518-87b1-3abc72550579.yaml identifier: b58e652c-bb96-4518-87b1-3abc72550579 uri: /reference/b58e652c-bb96-4518-87b1-3abc72550579 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'This study focused on two West Nile virus (WNV) disease outbreak years, 2003 and 2007, and included a three-county area (Larimer, Boulder, and Weld) in North Central Colorado that is hyperendemic for WNV disease. We used epidemiological data for reported WNV disease cases at the census tract scale to: (1) elucidate whether WNV disease incidence differs between census tracts classified as having high versus lower human population density (based on a threshold value of 580 persons/km2) and (2) determine associations between WNV disease incidence and habitat types suitable as development sites for the larval stage of Culex mosquito vectors. WNV disease incidence was significantly elevated in census tracts with lower human population density, compared with those with high density of human population, in both 2003 (median per census tract of 223 and 143 cases per 100,000 population, respectively) and 2007 (median per census tract of 46 and 19 cases per 100,000 population). This is most likely related, in large part, to greater percentages of coverage in less densely populated census tracts by habitats suitable as development sites for Culex larvae (open water, developed open space, pasture/hay, cultivated crops, woody wetlands, and emergent herbaceous wetlands) and, especially, for the subset of these habitats made up by irrigated agricultural land (pasture/hay and cultivated crops) that presumably serve as major producers of the locally most important vector of WNV to humans: Culex tarsalis. A series of analyses produced significant positive associations between greater coverage of or shorter distance to irrigated agricultural land and elevated WNV disease incidence. As an exercise to produce data with potential to inform spatial implementation schemes for prevention and control measures within the study area, we mapped the spatial patterns, by census tract, of WNV disease incidence in 2003 and 2007 as well as the locations of census tracts that had either low (<25th percentile) or high (>75th percentile) WNV disease incidence in both outbreak years (relative to the incidence for each year). This revealed substantial changes from 2003 to 2007 in the spatial pattern for census tracts within the study area with high WNV disease incidence and suggests a dynamic and evolving scenario of WNV transmission to humans that needs to be taken into account for prevention and control measures to stay current and represent the most effective use of available resources.' Author: 'Eisen, L.; Barker, C. M.; Moore, C. G.; Pape, W. J.; Winters, A. M.; Cheronis, N.' DOI: 10.1093/jmedent/47.5.939 Date: Sep ISSN: 1938-2928 Issue: 5 Journal: Journal of Medical Entomology Keywords: Agriculture; Animals; Colorado/epidemiology; Culicidae/*physiology; Disease Outbreaks; Endemic Diseases; Humans; Incidence; Population Density; Time Factors; Water; West Nile Fever/*epidemiology; West Nile virus/*physiology Notes: 'Eisen, Lars Barker, Christopher M Moore, Chester G Pape, W John Winters, Anna M Cheronis, Nicholas eng N01-AI-25489/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/ Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural 2010/10/14 06:00 J Med Entomol. 2010 Sep;47(5):939-51.' Pages: 939-951 Title: Irrigated agriculture is an important risk factor for West Nile virus disease in the hyperendemic Larimer-Boulder-Weld area of north central Colorado Volume: 47 Year: 2010 _record_number: 17999 _uuid: b62d4e92-7168-4ee7-b16d-f2400bb331ed reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1093/jmedent/47.5.939 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b62d4e92-7168-4ee7-b16d-f2400bb331ed.yaml identifier: b62d4e92-7168-4ee7-b16d-f2400bb331ed uri: /reference/b62d4e92-7168-4ee7-b16d-f2400bb331ed - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Sun, Liqiang; Kunkel, Kenneth E.; Stevens, Laura E.; Buddenberg, Andrew; Dobson, J.Greg; Easterling, David R.' DOI: 10.7289/V5RB72KG Pages: 111 Publisher: 'National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service' Report Number: NOAA Technical Report NESDIS 144 Title: 'Regional Surface Climate Conditions in CMIP3 and CMIP5 for the United States: Differences, Similarities, and Implications for the U.S. National Climate Assessment' URL: https://docs.lib.noaa.gov/noaa_documents/NESDIS/TR_NESDIS/TR_NESDIS_144.pdf Year: 2015 _record_number: 19332 _uuid: b63c9720-f770-4718-89cc-53b3616e2bec reftype: Report child_publication: /report/noaa-techreport-nesdis-144 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b63c9720-f770-4718-89cc-53b3616e2bec.yaml identifier: b63c9720-f770-4718-89cc-53b3616e2bec uri: /reference/b63c9720-f770-4718-89cc-53b3616e2bec - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: HUD Date Published: September 2007 Pages: 38 Publisher: 'U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Policy Development and Research' Title: Measuring Overcrowding in Housing URL: http://www.huduser.org/portal//Publications/pdf/Measuring_Overcrowding_in_Hsg.pdf Year: 2007 _record_number: 19085 _uuid: b646bdd2-b37b-4e55-aac1-060aa6d592b1 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/measuring-overcrowding-housing href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b646bdd2-b37b-4e55-aac1-060aa6d592b1.yaml identifier: b646bdd2-b37b-4e55-aac1-060aa6d592b1 uri: /reference/b646bdd2-b37b-4e55-aac1-060aa6d592b1 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'van Vliet, M. T. H.; Zwolsman, J. J. G.' DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2008.01.001 ISSN: 0022-1694 Issue: 1-2 Journal: Journal of Hydrology Pages: 1-17 Title: Impact of summer droughts on the water quality of the Meuse river Volume: 353 Year: 2008 _chapter: Ch7 _record_number: 17812 _uuid: b6607393-a0f4-47fb-8269-94bd378b6d61 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2008.01.001 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b6607393-a0f4-47fb-8269-94bd378b6d61.yaml identifier: b6607393-a0f4-47fb-8269-94bd378b6d61 uri: /reference/b6607393-a0f4-47fb-8269-94bd378b6d61 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'Global environmental change and sustainability science increasingly recognize the need to address the consequences of changes taking place in the structure and function of the biosphere. These changes raise questions such as: Who and what are vulnerable to the multiple environmental changes underway, and where? Research demonstrates that vulnerability is registered not by exposure to hazards (perturbations and stresses) alone but also resides in the sensitivity and resilience of the system experiencing such hazards. This recognition requires revisions and enlargements in the basic design of vulnerability assessments, including the capacity to treat coupled human–environment systems and those linkages within and without the systems that affect their vulnerability. A vulnerability framework for the assessment of coupled human–environment systems is presented.' Author: "Turner, B. L.\rKasperson, Roger E.\rMatson, Pamela A.\rMcCarthy, James J.\rCorell, Robert W.\rChristensen, Lindsey\rEckley, Noelle\rKasperson, Jeanne X.\rLuers, Amy\rMartello, Marybeth L.\rPolsky, Colin\rPulsipher, Alexander\rSchiller, Andrew" DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1231335100 Date: 'July 8, 2003' ISSN: 1091-6490 Issue: 14 Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Pages: 8074-8079 Title: A framework for vulnerability analysis in sustainability science URL: http://www.pnas.org/content/100/14/8074.abstract; http://www.pnas.org/content/100/14/8074.full.pdf Volume: 100 Year: 2003 _chapter: '["Ch. 26: Decision Support FINAL"]' _record_number: 3104 _uuid: b6a2f8d3-a113-4e46-b62c-7fbaf90b4f59 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1073/pnas.1231335100 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b6a2f8d3-a113-4e46-b62c-7fbaf90b4f59.yaml identifier: b6a2f8d3-a113-4e46-b62c-7fbaf90b4f59 uri: /reference/b6a2f8d3-a113-4e46-b62c-7fbaf90b4f59 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Kovats, R. S.; Edwards, S. J.; Hajat, S.; Armstrong, B. G.; Ebi, K. L.; Menne, B.' DOI: 10.1017/s0950268804001992 ISSN: 1469-4409 Issue: 3 Journal: Epidemiology & Infection Pages: 443-453 Title: 'The effect of temperature on food poisoning: A time-series analysis of salmonellosis in ten European countries' Volume: 132 Year: 2004 _chapter: Ch6 _record_number: 16199 _uuid: b6d4024a-eeca-4900-8198-d65b084285a2 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1017/s0950268804001992 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b6d4024a-eeca-4900-8198-d65b084285a2.yaml identifier: b6d4024a-eeca-4900-8198-d65b084285a2 uri: /reference/b6d4024a-eeca-4900-8198-d65b084285a2 - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Boykoff, Maxwell T.; Roberts, J.Timmons' ISBN: Human Development Report Office Occasional Paper Publisher: United National Development Programme Human Development Report 2007/2008 Title: 'Media Coverage of Climate Change: Current Trends, Strengths, Weaknesses' URL: http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Max_Boykoff2/publication/228637999_Media_coverage_of_climate_change_Current_trends_strengths_weaknesses/links/02e7e528bf129aba0b000000.pdf Year: 2007 _record_number: 19206 _uuid: b777f108-fbe5-400d-b06b-08d32b118d3c reftype: Report child_publication: /report/undp-occasional-paper-2007-3 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b777f108-fbe5-400d-b06b-08d32b118d3c.yaml identifier: b777f108-fbe5-400d-b06b-08d32b118d3c uri: /reference/b777f108-fbe5-400d-b06b-08d32b118d3c - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: "O'Neill, Marie S.; Kinney, Patrick L.; Cohen, Aaron J." DOI: 10.1080/15287390801997625 ISSN: 1087-2620 Issue: 9-10 Journal: 'Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Part A: Current Issues' Pages: 570-577 Title: 'Environmental equity in air quality management: Local and international implications for human health and climate change' Volume: 71 Year: 2008 _chapter: Ch9 _record_number: 16409 _uuid: b79c1dff-2558-4eae-9357-054e54a67366 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1080/15287390801997625 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b79c1dff-2558-4eae-9357-054e54a67366.yaml identifier: b79c1dff-2558-4eae-9357-054e54a67366 uri: /reference/b79c1dff-2558-4eae-9357-054e54a67366 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Partonen, T.; Haukka, Jari; Nevanlinna, Heikki; Lonnqvist, Jouko' DOI: 10.1016/s0165-0327(03)00137-x ISSN: 0165-0327 Issue: 2 Journal: Journal of Affective Disorders Pages: 133-139 Title: Analysis of the seasonal pattern in suicide Volume: 81 Year: 2004 _chapter: Ch8 _record_number: 16372 _uuid: b7ac5f4e-a5c4-4100-94d6-07237e48966b reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/s0165-0327(03)00137-x href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b7ac5f4e-a5c4-4100-94d6-07237e48966b.yaml identifier: b7ac5f4e-a5c4-4100-94d6-07237e48966b uri: /reference/b7ac5f4e-a5c4-4100-94d6-07237e48966b - attrs: .publisher: Emerald .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Searle, K.; Gow, K.' DOI: 10.1108/17568691011089891 Date: 2010/11/09 ISSN: 1756-8706 Issue: 4 Journal: International Journal of Climate Change Strategies and Management Pages: 362-379 Title: Do concerns about climate change lead to distress? Volume: 2 Year: 2010 _record_number: 18178 _uuid: b8589fd7-68ca-4045-aadf-f7be886662ed reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1108/17568691011089891 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b8589fd7-68ca-4045-aadf-f7be886662ed.yaml identifier: b8589fd7-68ca-4045-aadf-f7be886662ed uri: /reference/b8589fd7-68ca-4045-aadf-f7be886662ed - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Turner, N.J.; Gregory, R.; Brooks, C.; Failing, L.; Satterfield, T.' Issue: 2 Journal: Ecology and Society Pages: 7 Title: 'From invisibility to transparency: Identifying the implications' URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10535/2984 Volume: 13 Year: 2008 _record_number: 18274 _uuid: b8ac1a2b-c52f-43af-ab94-6d8d0048450c reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/from-invisibility-transparency href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b8ac1a2b-c52f-43af-ab94-6d8d0048450c.yaml identifier: b8ac1a2b-c52f-43af-ab94-6d8d0048450c uri: /reference/b8ac1a2b-c52f-43af-ab94-6d8d0048450c - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: SAMHSA ISBN: 'NSDUH Series H-49, HHS Publication No. (SMA) 14-4887' Place Published: 'Rockville, MD' Publisher: 'U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration' Title: 'Results from the 2013 National Survey on Drug Use and Health: Mental Health Findings' URL: http://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/default/files/NSDUHmhfr2013/NSDUHmhfr2013.pdf Year: 2014 _record_number: 18174 _uuid: b8c265a7-fa9a-42e4-aa2b-b34c32082f10 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/hhs-14-4887 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b8c265a7-fa9a-42e4-aa2b-b34c32082f10.yaml identifier: b8c265a7-fa9a-42e4-aa2b-b34c32082f10 uri: /reference/b8c265a7-fa9a-42e4-aa2b-b34c32082f10 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Cunsolo Willox, Ashlee; Harper, Sherilee L.; Edge, Victoria L.; Landman, Karen; Houle, Karen; Ford, James D.; Rigolet Inuit Community Government' DOI: 10.1016/j.emospa.2011.08.005 ISSN: 1755-4586 Journal: 'Emotion, Space and Society' Pages: 14-24 Title: 'The land enriches the soul: On climatic and environmental change, affect, and emotional health and well-being in Rigolet, Nunatsiavut, Canada' Volume: 6 Year: 2013 _chapter: Ch9 _record_number: 17834 _uuid: b8c76481-c90d-422c-a96e-c9a8995f4860 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.emospa.2011.08.005 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b8c76481-c90d-422c-a96e-c9a8995f4860.yaml identifier: b8c76481-c90d-422c-a96e-c9a8995f4860 uri: /reference/b8c76481-c90d-422c-a96e-c9a8995f4860 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Davydov, Dmitry M.; Stewart, Robert; Ritchie, Karen; Chaudieu, Isabelle' DOI: 10.1016/j.cpr.2010.03.003 ISSN: 0272-7358 Issue: 5 Journal: Clinical Psychology Review Pages: 479-495 Title: Resilience and mental health Volume: 30 Year: 2010 _chapter: Ch8 _record_number: 16357 _uuid: b8ed4175-6f57-4bf1-b560-7c44d90627d5 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.cpr.2010.03.003 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b8ed4175-6f57-4bf1-b560-7c44d90627d5.yaml identifier: b8ed4175-6f57-4bf1-b560-7c44d90627d5 uri: /reference/b8ed4175-6f57-4bf1-b560-7c44d90627d5 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: "Reid, C.E.\rGamble, J.L." DOI: 10.1007/s10393-009-0261-x ISSN: 1612-9202 Issue: 3 Journal: EcoHealth Pages: 458-470 Title: 'Aeroallergens, allergic disease, and climate change: Impacts and adaptation' URL: 'http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2Fs10393-009-0261-x ' Volume: 6 Year: 2009 _chapter: '["Ch. 9: Human Health FINAL","Overview"]' _record_number: 2611 _uuid: b9370347-fe7c-4b6f-9d49-af723ed931a4 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1007/s10393-009-0261-x href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b9370347-fe7c-4b6f-9d49-af723ed931a4.yaml identifier: b9370347-fe7c-4b6f-9d49-af723ed931a4 uri: /reference/b9370347-fe7c-4b6f-9d49-af723ed931a4 - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Berko, Jeffrey; Ingram, Deborah D; Saha, Shubhayu; Parker, Jennifer D' ISBN: 'National Health Statistics Reports No. 76, July 30, 2014' Notes: 'Ch2,7,8' Pages: 15 Place Published: 'Hyattsville, MD' Publication Title: National health statistics reports Publisher: National Center for Health Statistics Secondary Title: National Health Statistics Reports Title: 'Deaths Attributed to Heat, Cold, and Other Weather Events in the United States, 2006–2010' URL: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhsr/nhsr076.pdf Year: 2014 _chapter: 'Ch2,7,8' _record_number: 16421 _uuid: b9525432-c24b-4aee-9b0f-1783af53f48d reftype: Report child_publication: /report/cdc-nathealthstatreport-76 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b9525432-c24b-4aee-9b0f-1783af53f48d.yaml identifier: b9525432-c24b-4aee-9b0f-1783af53f48d uri: /reference/b9525432-c24b-4aee-9b0f-1783af53f48d - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'Climate change is likely to alter wildfire regimes, but the magnitude and timing of potential climate-driven changes in regional fire regimes are not well understood. We considered how the occurrence, size, and spatial location of large fires might respond to climate projections in the Greater Yellowstone ecosystem (GYE) (Wyoming), a large wildland ecosystem dominated by conifer forests and characterized by infrequent, high-severity fire. We developed a suite of statistical models that related monthly climate data (1972–1999) to the occurrence and size of fires >200 ha in the northern Rocky Mountains; these models were cross-validated and then used with downscaled (∼12 km × 12 km) climate projections from three global climate models to predict fire occurrence and area burned in the GYE through 2099. All models predicted substantial increases in fire by midcentury, with fire rotation (the time to burn an area equal to the landscape area) reduced to <30 y from the historical 100–300 y for most of the GYE. Years without large fires were common historically but are expected to become rare as annual area burned and the frequency of regionally synchronous fires increase. Our findings suggest a shift to novel fire–climate–vegetation relationships in Greater Yellowstone by midcentury because fire frequency and extent would be inconsistent with persistence of the current suite of conifer species. The predicted new fire regime would transform the flora, fauna, and ecosystem processes in this landscape and may indicate similar changes for other subalpine forests.' Author: "Westerling, Anthony L.\rTurner, Monica G.\rSmithwick, Erica A. H.\rRomme, William H.\rRyan, Michael G." DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1110199108 Date: 'July 25, 2011' ISSN: 1091-6490 Issue: 32 Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Pages: 13165-13170 Title: Continued warming could transform Greater Yellowstone fire regimes by mid-21st century URL: http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2011/07/20/1110199108.abstract; http://www.pnas.org/content/108/32/13165.full.pdf Volume: 108 Year: 2011 _chapter: '["Ch. 9: Human Health FINAL","RF 10","Ch. 8: Ecosystems FINAL","Overview","Ch. 7: Forests FINAL"]' _record_number: 3398 _uuid: b95e9226-076c-4eb5-9367-472499624084 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1073/pnas.1110199108 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b95e9226-076c-4eb5-9367-472499624084.yaml identifier: b95e9226-076c-4eb5-9367-472499624084 uri: /reference/b95e9226-076c-4eb5-9367-472499624084 - attrs: .reference_type: 16 Author: U.S. Census Bureau Date Published: December 2014 Place Published: 'Washington, D.C.' Publisher: U.S. Department of Commerce Secondary Title: '2014 National Population Projections: Summary Tables' Title: '2014 National Population Projections: Summary Tables. Table 9. Projections of the Population by Sex and Age for the United States: 2015 to 2060' URL: http://www.census.gov/population/projections/data/national/2014/summarytables.html Volume: 2014 Year: 2014 _chapter: Ch1 _record_number: 19072 _uuid: ba09d6c3-2a38-4200-be84-68601b4ea449 reftype: Web Page child_publication: ~ href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/ba09d6c3-2a38-4200-be84-68601b4ea449.yaml identifier: ba09d6c3-2a38-4200-be84-68601b4ea449 uri: /reference/ba09d6c3-2a38-4200-be84-68601b4ea449 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Isaksen, Tania Busch; Yost, Michael; Hom, Elizabeth; Fenske, Richard' DOI: 10.1515/reveh-2014-0029 ISSN: 0048-7554 Issue: 1-2 Journal: Reviews on Environmental Health Pages: 119-123 Title: Projected health impacts of heat events in Washington State associated with climate change Volume: 29 Year: 2014 _chapter: Ch2 _record_number: 17601 _uuid: ba31f764-b679-480d-adc9-a66cd2354c10 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1515/reveh-2014-0029 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/ba31f764-b679-480d-adc9-a66cd2354c10.yaml identifier: ba31f764-b679-480d-adc9-a66cd2354c10 uri: /reference/ba31f764-b679-480d-adc9-a66cd2354c10 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Thacker, Maria T. F.; Lee, Robin; Sabogal, Raquel I.; Henderson, Alden' DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-7717.2008.01041.x ISSN: 1467-7717 Issue: 2 Journal: Disasters Notes: 'Ch8,9' Pages: 303-315 Title: 'Overview of deaths associated with natural events, United States, 1979-2004' Volume: 32 Year: 2008 _chapter: 'Ch8,9' _record_number: 16414 _uuid: ba7027f1-e908-4148-a32c-1f054135ced2 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1111/j.1467-7717.2008.01041.x href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/ba7027f1-e908-4148-a32c-1f054135ced2.yaml identifier: ba7027f1-e908-4148-a32c-1f054135ced2 uri: /reference/ba7027f1-e908-4148-a32c-1f054135ced2 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'Transovarial transmission (TOT) of Borrelia burgdorferi (sensu lato), the agent of Lyme disease, by the Ixodes persulcatus group of hard ticks (Ixodidae) has frequently been reported in the literature since the discovery of Lyme disease 1982. Evidence for and against TOT by B. burgdorferi has led to uncertainty and confusion in the literature, causing misconceptions that may have public health consequences. In this report, we review the published information implicating B. burgdorferi as a bacterium transovarially transmitted among ticks of the Ixodes persulcatus group and present new data indicating the transovarially transmitted agent is actually Borrelia miyamotoi. B. miyamotoi, first described in 1995, is antigenically and phylogenetically related to B. burgdorferi, although more closely related to the relapsing fever-group Borrelia typically transmitted by soft ticks (Argasidae). Borrelia infections of unfed larvae derived from egg clutches of wild-caught Ixodes scapularis are demonstrated to result from transovarial transmission of B. miyamotoi, not B. burgdorferi. The presence of this second Borrelia species, apparently sympatric with B. burgdorferi worldwide also may explain other confusing observations reported on Borrelial/xodes relationships. (C) 2012 Published by Elsevier GmbH.' Author: 'Rollend, L.; Fish, D.; Childs, J. E.' DOI: 10.1016/j.ttbdis.2012.06.008 ISSN: 1877-959X Issue: 1-2 Journal: Ticks and Tick-Borne Diseases Keywords: transovarial transmission; borrelia miyamotoi; borrelia burgdorferi; ixodes scapularis; ticks; burgdorferi sensu-lato; dermacentor-variabilis acari; lyme-disease spirochete; southern new-york; north-sea island; miyamotoi sp-nov; ricinus ticks; monoclonal-antibody; blacklegged tick; pacificus acari Language: English Notes: 111KA Times Cited:6 Cited References Count:39 Pages: 46-51 Title: 'Transovarial transmission of Borrelia spirochetes by Ixodes scapularis: A summary of the literature and recent observations' Volume: 4 Year: 2013 _record_number: 17751 _uuid: bb02d9f4-230f-44e0-9837-10f095b54673 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.ttbdis.2012.06.008 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bb02d9f4-230f-44e0-9837-10f095b54673.yaml identifier: bb02d9f4-230f-44e0-9837-10f095b54673 uri: /reference/bb02d9f4-230f-44e0-9837-10f095b54673 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Leavitt, William M.; Kiefer, John J.' DOI: 10.1177/1087724X06289055 Date: April ISSN: 1087-724X Issue: 4 Journal: Public Works Management & Policy Pages: 306-314 Title: 'Infrastructure interdependency and the creation of a normal disaster: The case of Hurricane Katrina and the City of New Orleans' Volume: 10 Year: 2006 _record_number: 19068 _uuid: bb739352-eaf8-47ec-907f-8b895198eef9 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1177/1087724X06289055 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bb739352-eaf8-47ec-907f-8b895198eef9.yaml identifier: bb739352-eaf8-47ec-907f-8b895198eef9 uri: /reference/bb739352-eaf8-47ec-907f-8b895198eef9 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Becker-Blease, Kathryn A.; Turner, Heather A.; Finkelhor, David' DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2010.01453.x ISSN: 0009-3920 Issue: 4 Journal: Child Development Pages: 1040-1052 Title: 'Disasters, victimization, and children’s mental health' Volume: 81 Year: 2010 _chapter: Ch9 _record_number: 17828 _uuid: bbd5cea5-84f0-4f77-95ed-45c80f636a8a reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1111/j.1467-8624.2010.01453.x href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bbd5cea5-84f0-4f77-95ed-45c80f636a8a.yaml identifier: bbd5cea5-84f0-4f77-95ed-45c80f636a8a uri: /reference/bbd5cea5-84f0-4f77-95ed-45c80f636a8a - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: William Sweet; Joseph Park; John Marra; Chris Zervas; Stephen Gill Date Published: June 2014 ISBN: NOAA Technical Report NOS CO-OPS 073 Pages: 58 Place Published: 'Silver Spring, MD' Publisher: 'U.S. Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Ocean Service' Series Volume: NOAA Technical Report NOS CO-OPS 073 Title: Sea Level Rise and Nuisance Flood Frequency Changes Around the United States URL: http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/publications/NOAA_Technical_Report_NOS_COOPS_073.pdf Year: 2014 _record_number: 19061 _uuid: bbf3043e-9999-4f0e-8d0c-6012450d9d84 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/noaa-nos-co-ops-073 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bbf3043e-9999-4f0e-8d0c-6012450d9d84.yaml identifier: bbf3043e-9999-4f0e-8d0c-6012450d9d84 uri: /reference/bbf3043e-9999-4f0e-8d0c-6012450d9d84 - attrs: .reference_type: 7 Author: 'Bradley, G.L.; Reser, J.P.; Glendon, A.I.; Ellul, M.C.' Book Title: 'Stress and Anxiety: Applications to Social and Environmental Threats, Psychological Wellbeing, Occupational Challenges, and Developmental Psychology.' Editor: 'Kaniasty, Krzysztof; Buchwald, Petra; Howard, Siobhan; Moore, Kathleen A.' ISBN: 978-3832537203 Pages: 33-42 Place Published: Berlin Publisher: Logos Verlag Title: Distress and coping in response to climate change Year: 2014 _record_number: 18065 _uuid: bbf7d4c9-02f5-4800-86bf-5fc9b98a932e reftype: Book Section child_publication: /book/98b10eca-b84d-41b1-8438-8acf304ab273 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bbf7d4c9-02f5-4800-86bf-5fc9b98a932e.yaml identifier: bbf7d4c9-02f5-4800-86bf-5fc9b98a932e uri: /reference/bbf7d4c9-02f5-4800-86bf-5fc9b98a932e - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Hefflin, Brockton J.; Jalaludin, Bin; McClure, Emily; Cobb, Nathaniel; Johnson, Carol A.; Jecha, Larry; Etzel, Ruth A.' DOI: 10.1080/00039896.1994.9940378 ISSN: 0003-9896 Issue: 3 Journal: 'Archives of Environmental Health: An International Journal' Pages: 170-174 Title: 'Surveillance for dust storms and respiratory diseases in Washington State, 1991' Volume: 49 Year: 1994 _chapter: Ch7 _record_number: 16307 _uuid: bc026ba5-a282-4ad2-9fa0-396bb407012f reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1080/00039896.1994.9940378 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bc026ba5-a282-4ad2-9fa0-396bb407012f.yaml identifier: bc026ba5-a282-4ad2-9fa0-396bb407012f uri: /reference/bc026ba5-a282-4ad2-9fa0-396bb407012f - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'BACKGROUND: Tick-borne illnesses represent an important class of emerging zoonoses, with climate change projected to increase the geographic range within which tick-borne zoonoses might become endemic. We evaluated the impact of latitude on the rate of change in the incidence of Lyme disease in the United States, using publicly available data. METHODS: We estimated state-level year-on-year incidence rate ratios (IRRs) for Lyme disease for the period 1993 to 2007 using Poisson regression methods. We evaluated between-state heterogeneity in IRRs using a random-effects meta-analytic approach. We identified state-level characteristics associated with increasing incidence using random-effects meta-regression. RESULTS: The incidence of Lyme disease in the US increased by about 80% between 1993 and 2007 (IRR per year 1.049, 95% CI [confidence interval] 1.048 to 1.050). There was marked between-state heterogeneity in the average incidence of Lyme disease, ranging from 0.008 per 100 000 person-years in Colorado to 75 per 100 000 in Connecticut, and significant between-state heterogeneity in temporal trends (p < 0.001). In multivariable meta-regression models, increasing incidence showed a linear association with state latitude and population density. These 2 factors explained 27% of the between-state variation in IRRs. No independent association was identified for other state-level characteristics. INTERPRETATION: Lyme disease incidence increased in the US as a whole during the study period, but the changes were not uniform. Marked increases were identified in northern-most states, whereas southern states experienced stable or declining rates of Lyme disease.' Author: 'Tuite, A. R.; Greer, A. L.; Fisman, D. N.' DOI: 10.9778/cmajo.20120002 Date: Jan ISSN: 2291-0026 Issue: 1 Journal: CMAJ Open Notes: 'Tuite, Ashleigh R Greer, Amy L Fisman, David N eng Canada 2013/01/01 00:00 CMAJ Open. 2013 Apr 16;1(1):E43-7. doi: 10.9778/cmajo.20120002. eCollection 2013 Jan.' Pages: E43-E47 Title: Effect of latitude on the rate of change in incidence of Lyme disease in the United States Volume: 1 Year: 2013 _record_number: 18040 _uuid: bc29c835-8d1d-4608-abe9-6320f34a1b16 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.9778/cmajo.20120002 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bc29c835-8d1d-4608-abe9-6320f34a1b16.yaml identifier: bc29c835-8d1d-4608-abe9-6320f34a1b16 uri: /reference/bc29c835-8d1d-4608-abe9-6320f34a1b16 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: "CONTEXT: A disaster is indiscriminate in whom it affects. Limited research has shown that the poor and medically underserved, especially in rural areas, bear an inequitable amount of the burden. OBJECTIVE: To review the literature on the combined effects of a disaster and living in an area with existing health or health care disparities on a community's health, access to health resources, and quality of life. METHODS: We performed a systematic literature review using the following search terms: disaster, health disparities, health care disparities, medically underserved, and rural. Our inclusion criteria were peer-reviewed, US studies that discussed the delayed or persistent health effects of disasters in medically underserved areas. RESULTS: There has been extensive research published on disasters, health disparities, health care disparities, and medically underserved populations individually, but not collectively. CONCLUSIONS: The current literature does not capture the strain of health and health care disparities before and after a disaster in medically underserved communities. Future disaster studies and policies should account for differences in health profiles and access to care before and after a disaster." Author: 'Davis, J. R.; Wilson, S.; Brock-Martin, A.; Glover, S.; Svendsen, E. R.' DOI: 10.1017/S1935789300002391 Date: Mar ISSN: 1938-744X Issue: 01 Journal: Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness Keywords: Community Health Services/organization & administration; *Disasters; Health Services Accessibility/organization & administration; *Health Status Disparities; *Healthcare Disparities; Humans; *Medically Underserved Area; Quality of Life; Rural Health Services/organization & administration; Rural Population; Socioeconomic Factors; United States Pages: 30-38 Title: The impact of disasters on populations with health and health care disparities Volume: 4 Year: 2010 _chapter: Ch9 _record_number: 16419 _uuid: bc2afe1f-2d94-413a-a1c7-f7d3868751ed reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1017/S1935789300002391 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bc2afe1f-2d94-413a-a1c7-f7d3868751ed.yaml identifier: bc2afe1f-2d94-413a-a1c7-f7d3868751ed uri: /reference/bc2afe1f-2d94-413a-a1c7-f7d3868751ed - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'West Nile virus (WNV) has been present in the Yucatan State, Mexico, since 2002. Culex quinquefasciatus, one of the main vectors of WNV transmission in the United States, is also common in Mexico and may be a key vector of WNV transmission t o humans in t he Yucatan. The aim of this study was to determine the length of the gonotrophic cycle and the survival rates of Cx. quinquefasciatus from Merida, Yucatan, during the rainy versus the dry season. Mosquitoes were collected during 25-day periods in October (rainy season) and in April (dry season), and captured females were classified by abdominal appearance (freshly fed, late-stage fed, half gravid, and subgravid). To determine the age structure as nulliparous and parous females and to calculate the gonotrophic cycle through a time series and the mosquito survival, we used Davidson formulae. Also, vitellogenesis analysis to monitor egg maturity was conducted during both seasons. Cross-correlation data suggested a similar length of the gonotrophic cycle (4 days) in both seasons. Oogenic development required a minimum of 72 h in each season. However, survival of the mosquito population collected in the rainy season was significantly higher (0.91) with a mean temperature of 28 +/- 1.57 degrees C than was survival in the dry season (0.78) with a mean temperature of 29 +/- 1.10 degrees C. Survival, although higher during the rainy season, did not influence the length of the gonotrophic cycle of Cx. quinquefasciatus in Yucatan.' Author: 'García-Rejón, Julian E.; Farfan-Ale, Jose A.; Ulloa, Armando; Flores-Flores, Luis F.; Rosado-Paredes, Elsy; Baak-Baak, Carlos; Loroño-Pino, Maria A.; Fernández-Salas, Ildefonso; Beaty, Barry J.' DOI: 10.2987/5667.1 Date: Sep ISSN: 8756-971X Issue: 3 Journal: Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association Keywords: Animals; Culex/*physiology; Female; Mexico; *Oviparity; *Rain; *Seasons; Time Factors; Vitellogenesis Notes: "Garcia-Rejon, Julian E Farfan-Ale, Jose A Ulloa, Armando Flores-Flores, Luis F Rosado-Paredes, Elsy Baak-Baak, Carlos Lorono-Pino, Maria A Fernandez-Salas, Ildefonso Beaty, Barry J eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't 2008/10/23 09:00 J Am Mosq Control Assoc. 2008 Sep;24(3):344-8." Pages: 344-348 Title: 'Gonotrophic cycle estimate for Culex quinquefasciatus in Mérida, Yucatán, México' Volume: 24 Year: 2008 _record_number: 18001 _uuid: bc345bc8-27cb-401b-a957-d950bef3febc reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.2987/5667.1 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bc345bc8-27cb-401b-a957-d950bef3febc.yaml identifier: bc345bc8-27cb-401b-a957-d950bef3febc uri: /reference/bc345bc8-27cb-401b-a957-d950bef3febc - attrs: .publisher: American Meteorological Society .reference_type: 0 Abstract: "Abstract: Visibility-related weather hazards have significant impacts on motor vehicle operators due to decreased driver vision, reduced roadway speed, amplified speed variability, and elevated crash risk. This research presents a national analysis of fog-, smoke-, and dust storm-associated vehicular fatalities in the U.S. Initially, a database of weather-related motor vehicle crash fatalities from 1994?2011 is constructed from National Highway Traffic Safety Administration data. Thereafter, spatiotemporal analyses of visibility-related (crashes where a vision hazard was reported at time of event) and vision-obscured (driver's vision was recorded as obscured by weather and a weather-related vision hazard was reported) fatal vehicular crashes are presented. Results reveal that the annual number of fatalities associated with weather-related vision obscured vehicular crashes is comparable to those of more notable and captivating hazards such as tornadoes, floods, tropical cyclones, and lightning. The majority of these vision-obscured crash fatalities occurred in fog, on State and U.S. Numbered Highways, during the cool season, and during the morning commuting hours of 5 to 8 AM local time. Areas that experience the greatest frequencies of vision-obscured fatal crashes are located in the Central Valley of California, Appalachian Mountain and Mid-Atlantic region, the Midwest, and along the Gulf Coast. From 2007?2011, 72% of all vision-obscured fatal crashes occurred when there was no National Weather Service weather-related visibility advisory in effect. The deadliest weather-related visibility hazard crashes during the period are exhibited, revealing a spectrum of environmental and geographical settings that can trigger these high-end events. Capsule: The death toll from motor vehicle crashes due to weather-related vision hazards exceeds the number of fatalities caused by more notable hazards such as tornadoes, floods, tropical cyclones, and lightning." Author: 'Ashley, Walker S.; Strader, Stephen; Dziubla, Douglas C.; Haberlie, Alex' DOI: 10.1175/BAMS-D-14-00026.1 ISSN: 1520-0477 Issue: 5 Journal: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Pages: 755-778 Title: 'Driving blind: Weather-related vision hazards and fatal motor vehicle crashes' Volume: 96 Year: 2015 _record_number: 18995 _uuid: bc6db90e-3e83-4c12-8270-83da70318f67 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1175/BAMS-D-14-00026.1 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bc6db90e-3e83-4c12-8270-83da70318f67.yaml identifier: bc6db90e-3e83-4c12-8270-83da70318f67 uri: /reference/bc6db90e-3e83-4c12-8270-83da70318f67 - attrs: .publisher: National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'BACKGROUND: Epidemiologic studies have demonstrated an association between acute exposure to ambient fine particles and both mortality and morbidity. Less is known about the relative impacts of the specific chemical constituents of particulate matter < 2.5 μm in aerodynamic diameter (PM(2.5)) on hospital admissions. OBJECTIVE: This study was designed to estimate the risks of exposure to PM(2.5) and several species on hospital admissions for respiratory diseases among children. DATA AND METHODS: We obtained data on daily counts of hospitalizations for children < 19 and < 5 years of age for total respiratory diseases and several subcategories including pneumonia, acute bronchitis, and asthma for six California counties from 2000 through 2003, as well as ambient concentrations of PM(2.5) and its constituents, including elemental carbon (EC), organic carbon (OC), and nitrates (NO(3)). We used Poisson regression to estimate risks while controlling for important covariates. RESULTS: We observed associations between several components of PM(2.5) and hospitalization for all of the respiratory outcomes examined. For example, for total respiratory admissions for children < 19 years of age, the interquartile range for a 3-day lag of PM(2.5), EC, OC, NO(3), and sulfates was associated with an excess risk of 4.1% [95% confidence interval (CI), 1.8–6.4], 5.4% (95% CI, 0.8–10.3), 3.4% (95% CI, 1.1–5.7), 3.3% (95% CI, 1.1–5.5), and 3.0% (95% CI, 0.4–5.7), respectively. We also observed associations for several metals. Additional associations with several of the species, including potassium, were observed in the cool season. CONCLUSION: Components of PM(2.5) were associated with hospitalization for several childhood respiratory diseases including pneumonia, bronchitis, and asthma. Because exposure to components (e.g., EC, OC, NO(3), and K) and their related sources, including diesel and gasoline exhaust, wood smoke, and other combustion sources, are ubiquitous in the urban environment, it likely represents an identifiable and preventable risk factor for hospitalization for children.' Author: 'Ostro, Bart; Roth, Lindsey; Malig, Brian; Marty, Melanie' DOI: 10.1289/ehp.11848 Date: 12/16 06/23/received 12/16/accepted ISSN: 1552-9924 Issue: 3 Journal: Environmental Health Perspectives Notes: 'ehp-117-475[PII] 19337525[pmid] Environ Health Perspect' Pages: 475-480 Title: The effects of fine particle components on respiratory hospital admissions in children Volume: 117 Year: 2009 _record_number: 19096 _uuid: bc881478-a19f-48b7-af8e-40c36deaa679 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1289/ehp.11848 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bc881478-a19f-48b7-af8e-40c36deaa679.yaml identifier: bc881478-a19f-48b7-af8e-40c36deaa679 uri: /reference/bc881478-a19f-48b7-af8e-40c36deaa679 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Tarr, Phillip I.; Gordon, Carrie A.; Chandler, Wayne L.' DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(05)71144-2 ISSN: 1474-547X Journal: The Lancet Pages: 1073-1086 Title: Shiga-toxin-producing Escherichia coli and haemolytic uraemic syndrome Volume: 365 Year: 2005 _record_number: 19364 _uuid: bd29492f-7bfc-49f5-957e-c53d413736af reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/S0140-6736(05)71144-2 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bd29492f-7bfc-49f5-957e-c53d413736af.yaml identifier: bd29492f-7bfc-49f5-957e-c53d413736af uri: /reference/bd29492f-7bfc-49f5-957e-c53d413736af - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Leiserowitz, A.' DOI: 10.1007/s10584-006-9059-9 ISSN: 0165-0009 Issue: 1-2 Journal: Climatic Change Pages: 45-72 Title: 'Climate change risk perception and policy preferences: The role of affect, imagery, and values' Volume: 77 Year: 2006 _chapter: '["Ch. 28: Adaptation FINAL"]' _record_number: 324 _uuid: bd32de10-ebf5-44eb-9f99-4857be1f5ad4 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1007/s10584-006-9059-9 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bd32de10-ebf5-44eb-9f99-4857be1f5ad4.yaml identifier: bd32de10-ebf5-44eb-9f99-4857be1f5ad4 uri: /reference/bd32de10-ebf5-44eb-9f99-4857be1f5ad4 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Furth, Deborah P.' Issue: 1 Journal: Hastings West-Northwest Journal of Environmental Law and Policy Pages: 251-276 Title: "What's in the water? Climate change, waterborne pathogens, and the safety of the rural Alaskan water supply" Volume: 16 Year: 2010 _record_number: 18940 _uuid: bd9feade-2618-443b-93ba-f8a5aab0a442 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/whats-water href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bd9feade-2618-443b-93ba-f8a5aab0a442.yaml identifier: bd9feade-2618-443b-93ba-f8a5aab0a442 uri: /reference/bd9feade-2618-443b-93ba-f8a5aab0a442 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: "Medina-Ramón, M.\rSchwartz, J." DOI: 10.1136/oem.2007.033175 ISSN: 1470-7926 Issue: 12 Journal: Occupational and Environmental Medicine Pages: 827-833 Title: 'Temperature, temperature extremes, and mortality: A study of acclimatisation and effect modification in 50 US cities' URL: http://oem.bmj.com/content/64/12/827.full.pdf+html Volume: 64 Year: 2007 _chapter: '["Ch. 9: Human Health FINAL","Overview"]' _record_number: 1978 _uuid: bdea0759-701d-4183-9966-cee3ce977e08 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1136/oem.2007.033175 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bdea0759-701d-4183-9966-cee3ce977e08.yaml identifier: bdea0759-701d-4183-9966-cee3ce977e08 uri: /reference/bdea0759-701d-4183-9966-cee3ce977e08 - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Barlow, P.M.' ISBN: U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1262 Number: Circular 1262 Pages: 113 Place Published: 'Reston, VA' Title: Ground Water in Freshwater-Saltwater Environments of the Atlantic Coast URL: http://pubs.usgs.gov/circ/2003/circ1262/pdf/circ1262.pdf Year: 2003 _record_number: 18605 _uuid: bdf736ee-bbce-4486-9add-d0718c5e22e6 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/usgs-circular-1262 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bdf736ee-bbce-4486-9add-d0718c5e22e6.yaml identifier: bdf736ee-bbce-4486-9add-d0718c5e22e6 uri: /reference/bdf736ee-bbce-4486-9add-d0718c5e22e6 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Fann, Neal; Lamson, Amy D.; Anenberg, Susan C.; Wesson, Karen; Risley, David; Hubbell, Bryan J.' DOI: 10.1111/j.1539-6924.2011.01630.x ISSN: 1539-6924 Issue: 1 Journal: Risk Analysis Notes: 'Ch3,10' Pages: 81-95 Title: Estimating the national public health burden associated with exposure to ambient PM2.5 and ozone Volume: 32 Year: 2012 _chapter: 'Ch3,10' _record_number: 16105 _uuid: be14c1d4-c494-4844-b147-951f1c44a497 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1111/j.1539-6924.2011.01630.x href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/be14c1d4-c494-4844-b147-951f1c44a497.yaml identifier: be14c1d4-c494-4844-b147-951f1c44a497 uri: /reference/be14c1d4-c494-4844-b147-951f1c44a497 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Singer, Ben D.; Ziska, Lewis H.; Frenz, David A.; Gebhard, Dennis E.; Straka, James G.' DOI: 10.1071/fp05039 ISSN: 1445-4408 Issue: 7 Journal: Functional Plant Biology Notes: 'Ch3,6' Pages: 667-670 Title: Increasing Amb a 1 content in common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) pollen as a function of rising atmospheric CO2 concentration Volume: 32 Year: 2005 _chapter: 'Ch3,6' _record_number: 16475 _uuid: be4c7d95-2b71-45fb-b901-b68f5c1ad057 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1071/fp05039 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/be4c7d95-2b71-45fb-b901-b68f5c1ad057.yaml identifier: be4c7d95-2b71-45fb-b901-b68f5c1ad057 uri: /reference/be4c7d95-2b71-45fb-b901-b68f5c1ad057 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Fu, Fei Xue; Tatters, Avery O.; Hutchins, David A.' DOI: 10.3354/meps10047 ISSN: 1616-1599 Journal: Marine Ecology Progress Series Pages: 207-233 Title: Global change and the future of harmful algal blooms in the ocean Volume: 470 Year: 2012 _record_number: 16871 _uuid: be655d0c-74e0-4fb4-afa3-2f4a0770dc38 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.3354/meps10047 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/be655d0c-74e0-4fb4-afa3-2f4a0770dc38.yaml identifier: be655d0c-74e0-4fb4-afa3-2f4a0770dc38 uri: /reference/be655d0c-74e0-4fb4-afa3-2f4a0770dc38 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Qin, P.; Waltoft, B. L.; Mortensen, P. B.; Postolache, T. T.' DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2012-002462 ISSN: 2044-6055 Issue: 5 Journal: BMJ Open Pages: e002462 Title: 'Suicide risk in relation to air pollen counts: A study based on data from Danish registers' Volume: 3 Year: 2013 _chapter: Ch8 _record_number: 16376 _uuid: be6a9cf6-c65f-43a6-871a-4bc2c81c4b0e reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1136/bmjopen-2012-002462 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/be6a9cf6-c65f-43a6-871a-4bc2c81c4b0e.yaml identifier: be6a9cf6-c65f-43a6-871a-4bc2c81c4b0e uri: /reference/be6a9cf6-c65f-43a6-871a-4bc2c81c4b0e - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: "McCabe, Gregory J.\rBunnell, Joseph E." DOI: 10.1089/1530366041210765 ISSN: 1530-3667 Issue: 2 Journal: Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases Pages: 143-148 Title: Precipitation and the occurrence of Lyme disease in the northeastern United States Volume: 4 Year: 2004 _chapter: '["Ch. 16: Northeast FINAL"]' _record_number: 3981 _uuid: be8cf058-1959-4c24-b7e6-d6c13a6f2a59 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1089/1530366041210765 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/be8cf058-1959-4c24-b7e6-d6c13a6f2a59.yaml identifier: be8cf058-1959-4c24-b7e6-d6c13a6f2a59 uri: /reference/be8cf058-1959-4c24-b7e6-d6c13a6f2a59 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Chateau-Degat, Marie-Ludivine; Chinain, Mireille; Cerf, Nicole; Gingras, Suzanne; Hubert, Bruno; Dewailly, Éric' DOI: 10.1016/j.hal.2005.03.003 Date: 11// ISSN: 1878-1470 Issue: 6 Journal: Harmful Algae Keywords: ARIMA model; Gambierdiscus spp.; Ciguatera; Forecasting; French Polynesia; Prevention tools Pages: 1053-1062 Title: 'Seawater temperature, Gambierdiscus spp. variability and incidence of ciguatera poisoning in French Polynesia' Volume: 4 Year: 2005 _record_number: 18415 _uuid: bec651f5-80e4-4c87-bf94-4cdd373b5a62 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.hal.2005.03.003 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bec651f5-80e4-4c87-bf94-4cdd373b5a62.yaml identifier: bec651f5-80e4-4c87-bf94-4cdd373b5a62 uri: /reference/bec651f5-80e4-4c87-bf94-4cdd373b5a62 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'Heterogeneity in host populations and communities can have large effects on the transmission and control of a pathogen. In extreme cases, a few individuals give rise to the majority of secondary infections, which have been termed super spreading events. Here, we show that transmission of West Nile virus (WNV) is dominated by extreme heterogeneity in the host community, resulting in highly inflated reproductive ratios. A single relatively uncommon avian species, American robin (Turdus migratorius), appeared to be responsible for the majority of WNV-infectious mosquitoes and acted as the species equivalent of a super spreader for this multi-host pathogen. Crows were also highly preferred by mosquitoes at some sites, while house sparrows were significantly avoided. Nonetheless, due to their relative rarity, corvids (crows and jays) were relatively unimportant in WNV amplification. These results challenge current beliefs about the role of certain avian species in WNV amplification and demonstrate the importance of determining contact rates between vectors and host species to understand pathogen transmission dynamics.' Author: 'Kilpatrick, A. M.; Daszak, P.; Jones, M. J.; Marra, P. P.; Kramer, L. D.' DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2006.3575 Date: Sep 22 ISSN: 1471-2954 Issue: 1599 Journal: 'Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences' Keywords: Animals; Birds/*virology; Culicidae/*physiology/virology; Feeding Behavior/*physiology; West Nile Fever/*transmission; West Nile virus/isolation & purification Notes: "Kilpatrick, A Marm Daszak, Peter Jones, Matthew J Marra, Peter P Kramer, Laura D eng N01-AI-25490/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/ Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. England 2006/08/25 09:00 Proc Biol Sci. 2006 Sep 22;273(1599):2327-33." Pages: 2327-2333 Title: Host heterogeneity dominates West Nile virus transmission Volume: 273 Year: 2006 _record_number: 18007 _uuid: bed203be-a529-4cae-8cb6-5d15d517a0d2 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1098/rspb.2006.3575 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bed203be-a529-4cae-8cb6-5d15d517a0d2.yaml identifier: bed203be-a529-4cae-8cb6-5d15d517a0d2 uri: /reference/bed203be-a529-4cae-8cb6-5d15d517a0d2 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Garcia, Cynthia A.; Yap, Poh-Sin; Park, Hye-Youn; Weller, Barbara L.' DOI: 10.1080/09603123.2015.1061113 ISSN: 1369-1619 Issue: 2 Journal: International Journal of Environmental Health Research Pages: 145-157 Title: 'Association of long-term PM2.5 exposure with mortality using different air pollution exposure models: Impacts in rural and urban California' Volume: 26 Year: 2015 _record_number: 19202 _uuid: bef7bfab-586e-4b45-91f1-6f42c1409075 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1080/09603123.2015.1061113 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bef7bfab-586e-4b45-91f1-6f42c1409075.yaml identifier: bef7bfab-586e-4b45-91f1-6f42c1409075 uri: /reference/bef7bfab-586e-4b45-91f1-6f42c1409075 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: "Worldwide, anthropogenic climate change is now a reality and is already affecting the biology and ecology of some organisms, as well as several chemical pathways. Little is known about the consequences of climate change for the food system, particularly seafood, comprising all stages from \"farm to fork\" (mainly primary production, processing, transport and trading). In this context, the current review aims to elucidate climate change impacts on seafood safety and its human health implications. Both chemical and biological risks are foreseen to impair seafood safety in the future as a consequence of climate change; in particular, toxic metals, organic chemicals residues, algal toxins and pathogens of both humans and marine organisms. However, different species respond differently to such stresses. Public health authorities will face new challenges to guarantee seafood safety and to sustain consumers' confidence in eating seafood in a warmer world. (c) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved." Author: 'Marques, A.; Nunes, M. L.; Moore, S. K.; Strom, M. S.' DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2010.02.010 Date: Aug ISSN: 1873-7145 Issue: 7 Journal: Food Research International Keywords: Climate change; Seafood; Harmful algal blooms; Pathogens; Trace metals; Organic chemicals; harmful algal blooms; mussel perna-viridis; invertebrates; corophium-volutator; vibrio-parahaemolyticus strains; gulf-of-mexico; mytilus-edulis; physiological-response; crassostrea-virginica; aquatic; invertebrates; embryonic-development Language: English Notes: 'Times Cited: 9 Marques, Antonio Nunes, Maria Leonor Moore, Stephanie K. Strom, Mark S. Northwest Fisheries Science Center; National Marine Fisheries Service; National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA); West Coast Center for Oceans and Human Health (WCCOHH); NOAA Oceans and Human Health Initiative M.S.S. and S.K.M. acknowledge the support of the Northwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and the West Coast Center for Oceans and Human Health (WCCOHH). WCCOHH is funded by the NOAA Oceans and Human Health Initiative, and this work is WCCOHH publication number X. Elsevier science bv Amsterdam Si' Pages: 1766-1779 Title: 'Climate change and seafood safety: Human health implications' Volume: 43 Year: 2010 _record_number: 7486 _uuid: bf040614-daa5-4e4b-b4c6-3c05a49276be reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.foodres.2010.02.010 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bf040614-daa5-4e4b-b4c6-3c05a49276be.yaml identifier: bf040614-daa5-4e4b-b4c6-3c05a49276be uri: /reference/bf040614-daa5-4e4b-b4c6-3c05a49276be - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: "Page, L.A.\rHajat, S.\rKovats, R.S." DOI: 10.1192/bjp.bp.106.031948 ISSN: 0007-1250 Issue: 2 Journal: The British Journal of Psychiatry Pages: 106-112 Title: Relationship between daily suicide counts and temperature in England and Wales URL: http://bjp.rcpsych.org/content/191/2/106.full.pdf+html Volume: 191 Year: 2007 _chapter: '["Ch. 9: Human Health FINAL"]' _record_number: 2401 _uuid: bf16e763-fb16-45db-bdb9-e533ccb2bdac reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1192/bjp.bp.106.031948 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bf16e763-fb16-45db-bdb9-e533ccb2bdac.yaml identifier: bf16e763-fb16-45db-bdb9-e533ccb2bdac uri: /reference/bf16e763-fb16-45db-bdb9-e533ccb2bdac - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Youssouf, Hassani; Liousse, Catherine; Roblou, Laurent; Assamoi, Eric-Michel; Salonen, Raimo O.; Maesano, Cara; Banerjee, Soutrik; Annesi-Maesano, Isabella' DOI: 10.3390/ijerph111111772 ISSN: 1660-4601 Issue: 11 Journal: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health Pages: 11772-11804 Title: Non-accidental health impacts of wildfire smoke Volume: 11 Year: 2014 _chapter: Ch7 _record_number: 16350 _uuid: bf639de9-c45a-40d0-a115-5b1a5e45e5ee reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.3390/ijerph111111772 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bf639de9-c45a-40d0-a115-5b1a5e45e5ee.yaml identifier: bf639de9-c45a-40d0-a115-5b1a5e45e5ee uri: /reference/bf639de9-c45a-40d0-a115-5b1a5e45e5ee - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the association between residential distance to nearest major roadway, as a marker of long-term exposure to traffic pollution, and cognitive function in older adults. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study with median follow-up of 16.8 months. SETTING: Community. PARTICIPANTS: Seven hundred sixty-five community-dwelling seniors. MEASUREMENTS: The Mini-Mental State Examination, Hopkins Verbal Learning Test-Revised (HVLT-R), Trail Making Test (TMT), category and letter fluency tests, and Clock-in-the-Box Test were administered during home visits on two occasions. The residential distance to the nearest major roadway was calculated, and generalized estimating equations were used to evaluate the association between performance on each test and residential distance to nearest major roadway, adjusting for participant demographics, education, socioeconomic status, and past medical history. RESULTS: Shorter distance to major roadway was associated with statistically significantly poorer performance on the immediate and delayed recall components of the HVLT-R, TMT Part B, TMT delta, and letter and category fluency tests. Generally, participants residing less than 100 m from a major roadway performed worst. Performance improved monotonically with increasing distance. CONCLUSION: In this cohort of community-dwelling older adults, residential proximity to a major roadway was associated with poorer performance on cognitive tests of verbal learning and memory, psychomotor speed, language, and executive functioning. If causal, these results add to the growing evidence that living near major roadways is associated with adverse health outcomes.' Author: 'Wellenius, G. A.; Boyle, L. D.; Coull, B. A.; Milberg, W. P.; Gryparis, A.; Schwartz, J.; Mittleman, M. A.; Lipsitz, L. A.' DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2012.04195.x Date: Nov ISSN: 0002-8614 Issue: 11 Journal: Journal of the American Geriatrics Society Keywords: Aged; *Air Pollution; Cognition/*physiology; Cohort Studies; Female; Humans; Male; Prospective Studies; *Residence Characteristics Language: eng Notes: "1532-5415 Wellenius, Gregory A Boyle, Luke D Coull, Brent A Milberg, William P Gryparis, Alexandros Schwartz, Joel Mittleman, Murray A Lipsitz, Lewis A AG004390/AG/NIA NIH HHS/United States AG25037/AG/NIA NIH HHS/United States ES000002/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States ES009825/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States ES015774/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States K99 ES015774/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States P01 AG004390/AG/NIA NIH HHS/United States P01 ES009825/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States P30 ES000002/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States R00 ES015774/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/United States R37 AG025037/AG/NIA NIH HHS/United States Journal Article Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. United States J Am Geriatr Soc. 2012 Nov;60(11):2075-80. doi: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2012.04195.x. Epub 2012 Nov 5." Pages: 2075-2080 Title: 'Residential proximity to nearest major roadway and cognitive function in community-dwelling seniors: Results from the MOBILIZE Boston Study' Volume: 60 Year: 2012 _record_number: 18205 _uuid: bf86e108-6577-4e66-b97f-9ed230c2bb59 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1111/j.1532-5415.2012.04195.x href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bf86e108-6577-4e66-b97f-9ed230c2bb59.yaml identifier: bf86e108-6577-4e66-b97f-9ed230c2bb59 uri: /reference/bf86e108-6577-4e66-b97f-9ed230c2bb59 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: "Tirado, M.C.\rClarke, R.\rJaykus, L.A.\rMcQuatters-Gollop, A.\rFrank, J.M." DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2010.07.003 ISSN: 0963-9969 Issue: 7 Journal: Food Research International Pages: 1745-1765 Title: 'Climate change and food safety: A review' Volume: 43 Year: 2010 _chapter: '["RG 2 Southeast","Ch. 17: Southeast and Caribbean FINAL"]' _record_number: 3065 _uuid: bf92266b-c107-4d7c-9bbb-1e4a08fa0fc7 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.foodres.2010.07.003 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bf92266b-c107-4d7c-9bbb-1e4a08fa0fc7.yaml identifier: bf92266b-c107-4d7c-9bbb-1e4a08fa0fc7 uri: /reference/bf92266b-c107-4d7c-9bbb-1e4a08fa0fc7 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Lewitus, Alan J.; Horner, Rita A.; Caron, David A.; Garcia-Mendoza, Ernesto; Hickey, Barbara M.; Hunter, Matthew; Huppert, Daniel D.; Kudela, Raphael M.; Langlois, Gregg W.; Largier, John L.; Lessard, Evelyn J.; RaLonde, Raymond; Rensel, J.E. Jack; Strutton, Peter G.; Trainer, Vera L.; Tweddle, Jacqueline F.' DOI: 10.1016/j.hal.2012.06.009 ISSN: 1878-1470 Journal: Harmful Algae Pages: 133-159 Title: 'Harmful algal blooms along the North American west coast region: History, trends, causes, and impacts' Volume: 19 Year: 2012 _record_number: 17114 _uuid: bf9e1e12-177e-4d6a-bae5-c9ed434d64b2 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.hal.2012.06.009 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bf9e1e12-177e-4d6a-bae5-c9ed434d64b2.yaml identifier: bf9e1e12-177e-4d6a-bae5-c9ed434d64b2 uri: /reference/bf9e1e12-177e-4d6a-bae5-c9ed434d64b2 - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'EPA,' Institution: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Pages: 84 Place Published: 'Washington, D.C.' Title: 'Climate Change Indicators in the United States, 2nd Edition' URL: http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/pdfs/climateindicators-full-2012.pdf Year: 2012 _chapter: '["Ch. 26: Decision Support FINAL","Ch. 2: Our Changing Climate FINAL"]' _record_number: 3235 _uuid: bfc00315-ccea-4e7c-8a05-2650a07e4252 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/epa-430-r-12-004 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bfc00315-ccea-4e7c-8a05-2650a07e4252.yaml identifier: bfc00315-ccea-4e7c-8a05-2650a07e4252 uri: /reference/bfc00315-ccea-4e7c-8a05-2650a07e4252 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Alessandrini, Ester; Zauli Sajani, Stefano; Scotto, Fabiana; Miglio, Rossella; Marchesi, Stefano; Lauriola, Paolo' DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2011.07.005 ISSN: 0013-9351 Issue: 8 Journal: Environmental Research Pages: 1192-1200 Title: 'Emergency ambulance dispatches and apparent temperature: A time series analysis in Emilia–Romagna, Italy' Volume: 111 Year: 2011 _chapter: Ch2 _record_number: 17584 _uuid: bfe9c84b-bd9b-4db1-b09b-fd5d856176af reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.envres.2011.07.005 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bfe9c84b-bd9b-4db1-b09b-fd5d856176af.yaml identifier: bfe9c84b-bd9b-4db1-b09b-fd5d856176af uri: /reference/bfe9c84b-bd9b-4db1-b09b-fd5d856176af - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Appleyard, S.J.; Angeloni, J.; Watkins, R.' DOI: 10.1016/j.apgeochem.2005.09.008 ISSN: 0883-2927 Issue: 1 Journal: Applied Geochemistry Pages: 83-97 Title: 'Arsenic-rich groundwater in an urban area experiencing drought and increasing population density, Perth, Australia' Volume: 21 Year: 2006 _record_number: 19107 _uuid: bff0d105-61b1-450c-90e3-a82c7132021b reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.apgeochem.2005.09.008 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bff0d105-61b1-450c-90e3-a82c7132021b.yaml identifier: bff0d105-61b1-450c-90e3-a82c7132021b uri: /reference/bff0d105-61b1-450c-90e3-a82c7132021b - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'Hantaviruses cause hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) in Eurasia. In Europe both the amplitude and the magnitude of outbreaks of HFRS have increased. The mechanisms that drive the incidences are complex and multi-factorial and only partially due to increased awareness and improved diagnostic tools. Risk determinants include reservoir ecology, virus ecology and anthropogenic factors. The dogma of one specific rodent species as primordial reservoir for a specific hantavirus is increasingly challenged. New hantaviruses have been discovered in shrews, moles and bats and increasing evidence points at host-switching events and co-circulation in multiple, sympatric reservoir species, challenging the strict rodent-virus co-evolution theory. Changing landscape attributes and climatic parameters determine fluctuations in hantavirus epidemiology, for instance through increased food availability, prolonged virus survival and decreased biodiversity.' Author: 'Reusken, C.; Heyman, P.' DOI: 10.1016/j.coviro.2013.01.002 Date: Feb ISSN: 1879-6257 Issue: 1 Journal: Current Opinion in Virology Keywords: Animals; Climate; Ecosystem; Europe/epidemiology; Hantavirus/ isolation & purification; Hantavirus Infections/ epidemiology/ transmission; Human Activities; Humans; Incidence; Zoonoses/ epidemiology/ transmission Language: eng Notes: 'Reusken, Chantal Heyman, Paul Review Netherlands Curr Opin Virol. 2013 Feb;3(1):92-9. doi: 10.1016/j.coviro.2013.01.002. Epub 2013 Feb 4.' Pages: 92-99 Title: Factors driving hantavirus emergence in Europe Volume: 3 Year: 2013 _record_number: 5061 _uuid: c0076f84-2a19-435c-a326-efb6f0aa09c6 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.coviro.2013.01.002 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c0076f84-2a19-435c-a326-efb6f0aa09c6.yaml identifier: c0076f84-2a19-435c-a326-efb6f0aa09c6 uri: /reference/c0076f84-2a19-435c-a326-efb6f0aa09c6 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'After 3 dengue cases were acquired in Key West, Florida, we conducted a serosurvey to determine the scope of the outbreak. Thirteen residents showed recent infection (infection rate 5%; 90% CI 2%-8%), demonstrating the reemergence of dengue in Florida. Increased awareness of dengue among health care providers is needed.' Author: 'Radke, E. G.; Gregory, C. J.; Kintziger, K. W.; Sauber-Schatz, E. K.; Hunsperger, E.; Gallagher, G. R.; Barber, J. M.; Biggerstaff, B. J.; Stanek, D. R.; Tomashek, K. M.; Blackmore, C. G. M.' DOI: 10.3201/eid1801.110130 Date: Jan ISSN: 1080-6059 Issue: 01 Journal: Emerging Infectious Diseases Keywords: Dengue/*epidemiology; *Disease Outbreaks; Florida/epidemiology; Humans; Odds Ratio; Risk Factors Notes: "Radke, Elizabeth G Gregory, Christopher J Kintziger, Kristina W Sauber-Schatz, Erin K Hunsperger, Elizabeth A Gallagher, Glen R Barber, Jean M Biggerstaff, Brad J Stanek, Danielle R Tomashek, Kay M Blackmore, Carina G M eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S. 2012/01/20 06:00 Emerg Infect Dis. 2012 Jan;18(1):135-7. doi: 10.3201/eid1801.110130." Pages: 135-137 Title: 'Dengue outbreak in Key West, Florida, USA, 2009' Volume: 18 Year: 2012 _record_number: 18024 _uuid: c00f6a68-4fab-428d-92c6-fb5e266448a8 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.3201/eid1801.110130 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c00f6a68-4fab-428d-92c6-fb5e266448a8.yaml identifier: c00f6a68-4fab-428d-92c6-fb5e266448a8 uri: /reference/c00f6a68-4fab-428d-92c6-fb5e266448a8 - attrs: .reference_type: 16 Author: CDC Date Published: 'January 8, 2014' Place Published: 'Atlanta, GA' Publisher: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Title: CDC Estimates of Foodborne Illness in the United States URL: http://www.cdc.gov/foodborneburden/2011-foodborne-estimates.html Year: 2014 _record_number: 19120 _uuid: c03364a0-5c30-4bef-97a5-712edacd850c reftype: Web Page child_publication: /webpage/17051260-02e8-4675-be33-a2eb615c9b48 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c03364a0-5c30-4bef-97a5-712edacd850c.yaml identifier: c03364a0-5c30-4bef-97a5-712edacd850c uri: /reference/c03364a0-5c30-4bef-97a5-712edacd850c - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Schumacher, Russ S.; Galarneau, Thomas J.' DOI: 10.1175/mwr-d-11-00307.1 ISSN: 1520-0493 Issue: 6 Journal: Monthly Weather Review Pages: 1810-1827 Title: Moisture transport into midlatitudes ahead of recurving tropical cyclones and its relevance in two predecessor rain events Volume: 140 Year: 2012 _chapter: Ch7 _record_number: 17578 _uuid: c038793a-037f-4538-96f0-630545076166 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1175/mwr-d-11-00307.1 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c038793a-037f-4538-96f0-630545076166.yaml identifier: c038793a-037f-4538-96f0-630545076166 uri: /reference/c038793a-037f-4538-96f0-630545076166 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Lindsey, Nicle P.; Staples, J.Erin; Lehman, Jennifer A.; Fischer, Marc' ISSN: 1545-8636 Issue: 2 Journal: 'Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report - Surveillance Summaries' PMID: 20360671 Pages: 1-17 Title: 'Surveillance for human West Nile virus disease - United States, 1999-2008' URL: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/ss5902a1.htm Volume: 59 Year: 2010 _record_number: 19238 _uuid: c0396fac-d3a6-4f4a-832f-fcd95bc6e3d0 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/pmid-20360671 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c0396fac-d3a6-4f4a-832f-fcd95bc6e3d0.yaml identifier: c0396fac-d3a6-4f4a-832f-fcd95bc6e3d0 uri: /reference/c0396fac-d3a6-4f4a-832f-fcd95bc6e3d0 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Gubernot, Diane M.; Anderson, G. Brooke; Hunting, Katherine L.' DOI: 10.1007/s00484-013-0752-x ISSN: 1432-1254 Issue: 8 Journal: International Journal of Biometeorology Pages: 1779-1788 Title: 'The epidemiology of occupational heat exposure in the United States: A review of the literature and assessment of research needs in a changing climate' Volume: 58 Year: 2014 _chapter: Ch9 _record_number: 17849 _uuid: c03a82c4-94ef-4c8e-8062-99e9e3d5e45e reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1007/s00484-013-0752-x href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c03a82c4-94ef-4c8e-8062-99e9e3d5e45e.yaml identifier: c03a82c4-94ef-4c8e-8062-99e9e3d5e45e uri: /reference/c03a82c4-94ef-4c8e-8062-99e9e3d5e45e - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Delcour, Ilse; Spanoghe, Pieter; Uyttendaele, Mieke' DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2014.09.030 ISSN: 1873-7145 Journal: Food Research International Pages: 7-15 Title: 'Literature review: Impact of climate change on pesticide use' Volume: 68 Year: 2015 _record_number: 19110 _uuid: c0419502-0517-447b-886f-ece5ec4cda6c reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.foodres.2014.09.030 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c0419502-0517-447b-886f-ece5ec4cda6c.yaml identifier: c0419502-0517-447b-886f-ece5ec4cda6c uri: /reference/c0419502-0517-447b-886f-ece5ec4cda6c - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: "Chakraborty, S.\rNewton, A.C." DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3059.2010.02411.x ISSN: 1365-3059 Issue: 1 Journal: Plant Pathology Pages: 2-14 Title: 'Climate change, plant diseases and food security: An overview' Volume: 60 Year: 2011 _chapter: '["Ch. 9: Human Health FINAL"]' _record_number: 344 _uuid: c04c5716-c318-4a4c-9774-ae61ce97d305 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1111/j.1365-3059.2010.02411.x href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c04c5716-c318-4a4c-9774-ae61ce97d305.yaml identifier: c04c5716-c318-4a4c-9774-ae61ce97d305 uri: /reference/c04c5716-c318-4a4c-9774-ae61ce97d305 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Laugharne, Jonathan; Van de Watt, Gill; Janca, Aleksandar' DOI: 10.1097/YCO.0b013e32833f5e4e ISSN: 0951-7367 Issue: 1 Journal: Current Opinion in Psychiatry Pages: 72-77 Title: 'After the fire: The mental health consequences of fire disasters' Volume: 24 Year: 2011 _chapter: Ch8 _record_number: 16364 _uuid: c1170f20-6345-4a49-b0fd-455bbd1c3264 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1097/YCO.0b013e32833f5e4e href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c1170f20-6345-4a49-b0fd-455bbd1c3264.yaml identifier: c1170f20-6345-4a49-b0fd-455bbd1c3264 uri: /reference/c1170f20-6345-4a49-b0fd-455bbd1c3264 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Chen, Chi-Chung; McCarl, Bruce A.' DOI: 10.1023/a:1010655503471 ISSN: 1573-1480 Issue: 4 Journal: Climatic Change Pages: 475-487 Title: An investigation of the relationship between pesticide usage and climate change Volume: 50 Year: 2001 _chapter: Ch6 _record_number: 17899 _uuid: c11c6252-a26d-431f-b450-2d590921cdc7 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1023/a:1010655503471 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c11c6252-a26d-431f-b450-2d590921cdc7.yaml identifier: c11c6252-a26d-431f-b450-2d590921cdc7 uri: /reference/c11c6252-a26d-431f-b450-2d590921cdc7 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: "BACKGROUND: Severe heat-related illness can result in hospitalisation and possibly death. These illnesses are potentially preventable; in Australia high environmental temperatures are common. AIMS: To identify (i) possible risk factors for hospital attendance with heat-related illness during a heat wave, (ii) problems with diagnosis and therapy, (iii) issues in prevention, and (iv) areas for further study. METHODS: A retrospective descriptive survey from four major teaching hospitals in Adelaide, South Australia (SA), was conducted during a ten day period of exceptional heat in February 1993, in order to review all emergency department presentations (i.e. deaths, casualty treatment or hospital admissions) with a heat-related illness as determined by attending doctors' documentation. Demographic, clinical, management and outcome data were collected. RESULTS: Ninety-four patients were classified as having a heat-related illness of whom 78% had heat exhaustion. Eighty-five per cent were age 60 years or over; 20% came from institutional care; 48% lived alone; 30% had poor mobility. Peak presentation followed high daily temperatures for four consecutive days. Severity was related to pre-existing cognitive impairment, diuretic use and presenting temperature, heart rate, blood pressure, plasma sodium and plasma creatinine. Treatment tended to be non-standardised. Mortality was 12%. Seventeen per cent required a more dependent level of residential care upon discharge. CONCLUSION: Problems were identified in accuracy of diagnosis and appropriate intervention. Awareness of the risk factor profile is needed among health workers, to ensure early preventative strategies. Populations to target for future prevention include elderly people (including those in institutional care), patients with cognitive impairment and patients taking diuretics, multiple medication and/or with other severe co-existing illnesses. Treatment could be more standardised." Author: 'Faunt, J. D.; Wilkinson, T. J.; Aplin, P.; Henschke, P.; Webb, M.; Penhall, R. K.' DOI: 10.1111/j.1445-5994.1995.tb02822.x Date: Apr ISSN: 0004-8291 Issue: 2 Journal: Australian and New Zealand Journal of Medicine Keywords: 'Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Female; Frail Elderly/statistics & numerical data; *Heat Exhaustion/epidemiology/prevention & control/therapy; *Hospitalization; Hot Temperature/*adverse effects; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Retrospective Studies; Risk Factors; South Australia/epidemiology' Language: eng Notes: 'Faunt, J D Wilkinson, T J Aplin, P Henschke, P Webb, M Penhall, R K Journal Article Australia Aust N Z J Med. 1995 Apr;25(2):117-21.' Pages: 117-121 Title: 'The effete in the heat: Heat-related hospital presentations during a ten day heat wave' Volume: 25 Year: 1995 _record_number: 18087 _uuid: c142a857-65af-499e-9f99-3e1666903eca reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1111/j.1445-5994.1995.tb02822.x href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c142a857-65af-499e-9f99-3e1666903eca.yaml identifier: c142a857-65af-499e-9f99-3e1666903eca uri: /reference/c142a857-65af-499e-9f99-3e1666903eca - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Levantesi, Caterina; Bonadonna, Lucia; Briancesco, Rossella; Grohmann, Elisabeth; Toze, Simon; Tandoi, Valter' DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2011.06.037 Date: 3// ISSN: 1873-7145 Issue: 2 Journal: Food Research International Keywords: Water-borne outbreaks; Salmonella; Typhoid fever; Surface water; Multiple drug resistance; Drinking water Pages: 587-602 Title: 'Salmonella in surface and drinking water: Occurrence and water-mediated transmission' Volume: 45 Year: 2012 _record_number: 19018 _uuid: c14babc5-c018-4eb8-aa5a-8630fc626451 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.foodres.2011.06.037 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c14babc5-c018-4eb8-aa5a-8630fc626451.yaml identifier: c14babc5-c018-4eb8-aa5a-8630fc626451 uri: /reference/c14babc5-c018-4eb8-aa5a-8630fc626451 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Trainer, Vera L.; Eberhart, Bich-Thuy L.; Wekell, John C.; Adams, Nicolaus G.; Hanson, Linda; Cox, Frank; Dowell, Judy' ISSN: 1943-6319 Issue: 1 Journal: Journal of Shellfish Research Keywords: alexandrium; PSP; Puget Sound; Washington Pages: 213-223 Title: 'Paralytic shellfish toxins in Puget Sound, Washington state' Volume: 22 Year: 2003 _record_number: 17498 _uuid: c18994b6-018f-40ab-95e0-f8f9102723c8 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/paralytic-shellfish-toxins-puget-sound-washington-state href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c18994b6-018f-40ab-95e0-f8f9102723c8.yaml identifier: c18994b6-018f-40ab-95e0-f8f9102723c8 uri: /reference/c18994b6-018f-40ab-95e0-f8f9102723c8 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'OBJECTIVE: This study estimated the prevalence of psychopathology at a three-month follow-up among persons seeking emergency relief services after a wildfire and identified a practical screener for use in these disaster assistance settings to aid early identification of persons at risk of subsequent psychopathology. METHODS: During the October 2003 California firestorm that occurred at the wildland-urban interface, 357 persons who were seeking assistance from adjacent American Red Cross and government relief centers were recruited for this study. Within days of mandatory evacuation, participants completed baseline self-administered questionnaires assessing demographic characteristics, initial subjective reactions, and degree of fire exposure. At the three-month follow-up, symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and major depression were measured via a mailed survey. RESULTS: At follow-up 33% showed evidence of probable major depression; 24% exhibited probable PTSD. On a bivariate basis, seven initial reaction and fire exposure items were significantly associated with subsequent psychopathology. Best-subsets logistic regression analyses revealed that property damage and physical injury were the best multivariate predictors of psychopathology at follow-up. No additional items provided a significant incremental improvement in prediction. CONCLUSIONS: Individuals seeking immediate emergency assistance related to the wildland-urban interface fire were at elevated risk of psychopathology in the weeks after the fire. A short, easily administered, two-item screener, composed of items assessing fire exposure severity, appears to hold promise for aiding early identification of persons at risk of postfire psychopathology. These findings may also have implications for other mass disasters.' Author: 'Marshall, G. N.; Schell, T. L.; Elliott, M. N.; Rayburn, N. R.; Jaycox, L. H.' DOI: 10.1176/appi.ps.58.4.509 Date: Apr ISSN: 1557-9700 Issue: 4 Journal: Psychiatric Services Keywords: 'Adult; California; Comorbidity; Cross-Sectional Studies; Depressive Disorder, Major/diagnosis/*epidemiology/psychology; Early Diagnosis; Female; Financing, Government/*utilization; Fires/*statistics & numerical data; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Male; Mass Screening/statistics & numerical data; Middle Aged; Psychopathology; Questionnaires; *Red Cross; Risk Factors; Rural Population/statistics & numerical data; Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/diagnosis/*epidemiology/psychology; Urban Population/statistics & numerical data' Language: eng Notes: "Marshall, Grant N Schell, Terry L Elliott, Marc N Rayburn, Nadine R Jaycox, Lisa H MH-056122/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United States Journal Article Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't United States Psychiatr Serv. 2007 Apr;58(4):509-14." Pages: 509-514 Title: Psychiatric disorders among adults seeking emergency disaster assistance after a wildland-urban interface fire Volume: 58 Year: 2007 _record_number: 18130 _uuid: c1f322cc-dd13-470a-bcba-de7e5a992310 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1176/appi.ps.58.4.509 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c1f322cc-dd13-470a-bcba-de7e5a992310.yaml identifier: c1f322cc-dd13-470a-bcba-de7e5a992310 uri: /reference/c1f322cc-dd13-470a-bcba-de7e5a992310 - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: Walkerton Commission of Inquiry Pages: 504 Place Published: 'Toronto, ONT' Publisher: Ontario Ministry of the Attorney General Title: 'Part One Report of the Walkerton Commission of Inquiry: The Events of May 2000 and Related Issues' URL: http://www.attorneygeneral.jus.gov.on.ca/english/about/pubs/walkerton/part1/ Year: 2002 _record_number: 19060 _uuid: c212dd80-2645-479f-90a4-54d026f694ed reftype: Report child_publication: /report/walkerton-commission-part1-2002 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c212dd80-2645-479f-90a4-54d026f694ed.yaml identifier: c212dd80-2645-479f-90a4-54d026f694ed uri: /reference/c212dd80-2645-479f-90a4-54d026f694ed - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'There is concern in Australia that droughts substantially increase the incidence of suicide in rural populations, particularly among male farmers and their families. We investigated this possibility for the state of New South Wales (NSW), Australia between 1970 and 2007, analyzing data on suicides with a previously established climatic drought index. Using a generalized additive model that controlled for season, region, and long-term suicide trends, we found an increased relative risk of suicide of 15% (95% confidence interval, 8%-22%) for rural males aged 30-49 y when the drought index rose from the first quartile to the third quartile. In contrast, the risk of suicide for rural females aged >30 y declined with increased values of the drought index. We also observed an increased risk of suicide in spring and early summer. In addition there was a smaller association during unusually warm months at any time of year. The spring suicide increase is well documented in nontropical locations, although its cause is unknown. The possible increased risk of suicide during drought in rural Australia warrants public health focus and concern, as does the annual, predictable increase seen each spring and early summer. Suicide is a complex phenomenon with many interacting social, environmental, and biological causal factors. The relationship between drought and suicide is best understood using a holistic framework. Climate change projections suggest increased frequency and severity of droughts in NSW, accompanied and exacerbated by rising temperatures. Elucidating the relationships between drought and mental health will help facilitate adaptation to climate change.' Author: 'Hanigan, I. C.; Butler, C. D.; Kokic, P. N.; Hutchinson, M. F.' DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1112965109 Date: Aug 28 ISSN: 1091-6490 Issue: 35 Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Keywords: 'Adaptation, Psychological; Adult; Agriculture/ statistics & numerical data; Climate Change/statistics & numerical data; Depressive Disorder/epidemiology/psychology; Droughts/ statistics & numerical data; Female; Humans; Incidence; Male; Middle Aged; New South Wales/epidemiology; Rain; Risk Factors; Rural Population/statistics & numerical data; Suicide/psychology/ statistics & numerical data/ trends' Language: eng Notes: "Hanigan, Ivan C Butler, Colin D Kokic, Philip N Hutchinson, Michael F Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't United States Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2012 Aug 28;109(35):13950-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1112965109. Epub 2012 Aug 13." Pages: 13950-13955 Title: 'Suicide and drought in New South Wales, Australia, 1970–2007' Volume: 109 Year: 2012 _record_number: 4517 _uuid: c22caf01-8728-44cb-af5b-47fac06d1b68 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1073/pnas.1112965109 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c22caf01-8728-44cb-af5b-47fac06d1b68.yaml identifier: c22caf01-8728-44cb-af5b-47fac06d1b68 uri: /reference/c22caf01-8728-44cb-af5b-47fac06d1b68 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Vinikoor-Imler, Lisa C.; Owens, Elizabeth Oesterling; Nichols, Jennifer L.; Ross, Mary; Brown, James S.; Sacks, Jason D.' DOI: 10.1289/ehp.1307541 ISSN: 1552-9924 Issue: 11 Journal: Environmental Health Perspectives Pages: 1166-1176 Title: 'Evaluating potential response-modifying factors for associations between ozone and health outcomes: A weight-of-evidence approach' Volume: 122 Year: 2014 _chapter: Ch10 _record_number: 16551 _uuid: c2343eaa-3129-4e2d-aacb-d2470c832aa7 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1289/ehp.1307541 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c2343eaa-3129-4e2d-aacb-d2470c832aa7.yaml identifier: c2343eaa-3129-4e2d-aacb-d2470c832aa7 uri: /reference/c2343eaa-3129-4e2d-aacb-d2470c832aa7 - attrs: .reference_type: 9 Author: WHO Editor: 'Zeeb, Hajo; Shannoun, Ferid' ISBN: 9789241547673 Number of Pages: 108 Place Published: 'Geneva, Switzerland' Publication Title: WHO ISBN Publisher: World Health Organization Secondary Title: WHO ISBN Title: 'WHO Handbook on Indoor Radon: A Public Health Perspective' URL: http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2009/9789241547673_eng.pdf Year: 2009 _record_number: 18963 _uuid: c2470d60-faed-4239-8180-0d5ea58cfcfe reftype: Book child_publication: /book/4ad13c37-3508-4b45-923b-690aac72ecfa href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c2470d60-faed-4239-8180-0d5ea58cfcfe.yaml identifier: c2470d60-faed-4239-8180-0d5ea58cfcfe uri: /reference/c2470d60-faed-4239-8180-0d5ea58cfcfe - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: "Tagaris, E.\rLiao, K.J.\rDeLucia, A.J.\rDeck, L.\rAmar, P.\rRussell, A.G." DOI: 10.1021/es803650w ISSN: 0013-936X Issue: 13 Journal: Environmental Science & Technology Pages: 4979-4988 Title: Potential impact of climate change on air pollution-related human health effects Volume: 43 Year: 2009 _chapter: '["Ch. 9: Human Health FINAL","Ch. 17: Southeast and Caribbean FINAL"]' _record_number: 3008 _uuid: c275ae44-75e4-4974-81ea-fe7119474ffb reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1021/es803650w href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c275ae44-75e4-4974-81ea-fe7119474ffb.yaml identifier: c275ae44-75e4-4974-81ea-fe7119474ffb uri: /reference/c275ae44-75e4-4974-81ea-fe7119474ffb - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'OBJECTIVES: This report presents birth data for the region affected by Hurricane Katrina, which made landfall along the Gulf Coast of the United States on August 29, 2005, comparing the 12-month periods before and after the storm according to a wide variety of characteristics. Data are presented for maternal demographic characteristics including age, race, Hispanic origin, marital status, and educational attainment; medical care utilization by pregnant women (prenatal care and method of delivery); and infant characteristics or birth outcomes (period of gestation and birthweight). METHODS: Descriptive tabulations of data reported on the birth certificates of residents of the 91 Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)-designated counties and parishes of Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi are presented for the 12-month periods before and after Hurricane Katrina struck, from August 29, 2004, through August 28, 2006. Detailed data are shown separately for 14 selected, FEMA-designated coastal counties and parishes within a 100-mile radius of the Hurricane Katrina storm path, the area hit very hard by the storm and subsequent flooding. These 14 selected coastal counties and parishes are a subset of the 91 FEMA-designated counties and parishes. RESULTS: The total number of births in the 14 selected FEMA-designated counties and parishes decreased 19 percent in the 12 months after Hurricane Katrina compared with the 12 months before, with births declining in the selected counties and parishes of Louisiana and Mississippi and rising in the counties of Alabama. The number of births to non-Hispanic black women in the selected parishes of Louisiana fell substantially after Hurricane Katrina; births declined for non-Hispanic white, Hispanic, and Asian or Pacific Islander women in these selected parishes as well. The percentage of births to women under age 20 years for the selected counties and parishes after the storm was essentially unchanged in Alabama and Mississippi, but decreased in Louisiana. The proportion of births to unmarried women decreased in the selected parishes of Louisiana, but increased in the selected counties elsewhere. Large decreases were observed in very preterm and very low birthweight rates for the selected parishes of Louisiana following Hurricane Katrina, whereas a large increase was observed in very preterm births for the selected counties of Alabama.' Author: 'Hamilton, B. E.; Sutton, P. D.; Mathews, T. J.; Martin, J. A.; Ventura, S. J.' Date: Aug 28 ISSN: 1551-8930 Issue: 2 Journal: National Vital Statistics Reports Keywords: 'Alabama; Birth Rate/*trends; Cyclonic Storms/*statistics & numerical data; Female; Floods/*statistics & numerical data; Humans; Infant Welfare/statistics & numerical data; Infant, Newborn; Louisiana; Male; Mental Health/statistics & numerical data; Mississippi; New Orleans; Pregnancy/*statistics & numerical data; Seasons; Time Factors' Language: eng Notes: 'Hamilton, Brady E Sutton, Paul D Mathews, T J Martin, Joyce A Ventura, Stephanie J Journal Article United States Natl Vital Stat Rep. 2009 Aug 28;58(2):1-28, 32.' PMID: 19754006 Pages: '1-28, 32' Title: 'The effect of Hurricane Katrina: Births in the U.S. Gulf Coast region, before and after the storm' URL: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr58/nvsr58_02.pdf Volume: 58 Year: 2009 _record_number: 19092 _uuid: c2dbfe62-120e-4214-b907-2c0beb82bb2d reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/pmid-19754006 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c2dbfe62-120e-4214-b907-2c0beb82bb2d.yaml identifier: c2dbfe62-120e-4214-b907-2c0beb82bb2d uri: /reference/c2dbfe62-120e-4214-b907-2c0beb82bb2d - attrs: .reference_type: 1 Author: 'IOM,' DOI: 10.17226/13115 Number of Pages: 286 Place Published: 'Washington, D.C.' Publisher: The National Academies Press Reviewer: c2e46e42-7cb9-4bb0-91df-c676943cd62a Title: 'Climate Change, the Indoor Environment, and Health' URL: http://www.nap.edu Year: 2011 _chapter: '["Ch. 9: Human Health FINAL","Overview"]' _record_number: 346 _uuid: c2e46e42-7cb9-4bb0-91df-c676943cd62a reftype: Book child_publication: /report/iom-indoorenvironment-2011 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c2e46e42-7cb9-4bb0-91df-c676943cd62a.yaml identifier: c2e46e42-7cb9-4bb0-91df-c676943cd62a uri: /reference/c2e46e42-7cb9-4bb0-91df-c676943cd62a - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Ji, Meng; Cohan, Daniel S.; Bell, Michelle L.' DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/6/2/024006 ISSN: 1748-9326 Issue: 2 Journal: Environmental Research Letters Pages: 024006 Title: Meta-analysis of the association between short-term exposure to ambient ozone and respiratory hospital admissions Volume: 6 Year: 2011 _chapter: Ch10 _record_number: 16540 _uuid: c328df20-eafd-4794-9c0f-aab46911441a reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1088/1748-9326/6/2/024006 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c328df20-eafd-4794-9c0f-aab46911441a.yaml identifier: c328df20-eafd-4794-9c0f-aab46911441a uri: /reference/c328df20-eafd-4794-9c0f-aab46911441a - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'Dynamical downscaling was applied in this study to link the global climate-chemistry model Community At- mosphere Model (CAM-Chem) with the regional models Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model and Com- munity Multi-scale Air Quality (CMAQ). Two representative concentration pathway (RCP) scenarios (RCP 4.5 and RCP 8.5) were used to evaluate the climate impact on ozone con- centrations in the 2050s. From the CAM-Chem global simulation results, ozone concentrations in the lower to mid-troposphere (surface to ∼300 hPa), from mid- to high latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere, decreases by the end of the 2050s (2057–2059) in RCP 4.5 compared to present (2001–2004), with the largest decrease of 4–10 ppbv occurring in the summer and the fall; and an increase as high as 10 ppbv in RCP 8.5 re- sulting from the increased methane emissions. From the regional model CMAQ simulation results, un- der the RCP 4.5 scenario (2057–2059), in the summer when photochemical reactions are the most active, the large ozone precursor emissions reduction leads to the greatest decrease of downscaled surface ozone concentrations compared to present (2001–2004), ranging from 6 to 10 ppbv. However, a few major cities show ozone increases of 3 to 7 ppbv due to weakened NO titration. Under the RCP 8.5 scenario, in winter, downscaled ozone concentrations increase across nearly the entire continental US in winter, ranging from 3 to 10 ppbv due to increased methane emissions. More in- tense heat waves are projected to occur by the end of the 2050s in RCP 8.5, leading to a 0.3 ppbv to 2.0 ppbv increase (statistically significant except in the Southeast) of the mean maximum daily 8 h daily average (MDA8) ozone in nine cli- mate regions in the US. Moreover, the upper 95% limit of MDA8 increase reaches 0.4 ppbv to 1.5 ppbv in RCP 4.5 and 0.6 ppbv to 3.2 ppbv in RCP 8.5. The magnitude differences of increase between RCP 4.5 and 8.5 also reflect that the in- crease of methane emissions may favor or strengthen the effect.' Author: 'Gao, Y.; Fu, J. S.; Drake, J. B.; Lamarque, J.-F.; Liu, Y.' DOI: 10.5194/acp-13-9607-2013 ISSN: 1680-7324 Issue: 18 Journal: Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Pages: 9607-9621 Title: The impact of emission and climate change on ozone in the United States under representative concentration pathways (RCPs) Volume: 13 Year: 2013 _record_number: 18893 _uuid: c32eafb4-b6c1-4580-99a6-55740cea74c0 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.5194/acp-13-9607-2013 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c32eafb4-b6c1-4580-99a6-55740cea74c0.yaml identifier: c32eafb4-b6c1-4580-99a6-55740cea74c0 uri: /reference/c32eafb4-b6c1-4580-99a6-55740cea74c0 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: "OBJECTIVES: With a longitudinal prospective design, we examined the impact of floods on the mental and physical health of older adults and explored risk and protective factors. METHOD: Two hundred and seventy four older adults (age >/=60) completed surveys before and after a flood event. Both the surveys included measures of anxiety, depression, self-reported health, and satisfaction with life; the post-flood survey also included questionnaires on flood experience, symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), stoicism, and psychological coping with floods. RESULTS: Compared to those not personally affected (78.8%), personally affected individuals (21.2%) reported significantly higher PTSD symptoms, with about one in six reporting PTSD symptoms that might require clinical attention. Personally affected individuals also reported a greater increase in anxiety post-flood, but changes in their depressive symptoms and self-reported health were not significantly different from those not personally affected. Greater flood exposure and the lack of social support were the risk factors for poorer mental and physical health. Higher stoicism was associated with higher post-flood depression and poorer self-reported mental health. The use of maladaptive coping, such as venting and distraction, was associated with greater deterioration in mental health after floods, whilst emotion-focused coping such as acceptance, positive reframing, and humour, was protective against such deterioration. CONCLUSION: Floods had adverse psychological impacts on some older adults who were personally affected. Despite the evidence of resilience, a small proportion of older adults experienced significant difficulties after the floods. The findings in this study help understand older adults' psychological responses to disasters and have practical implications for service planning and delivery." Author: 'Bei, B.; Bryant, C.; Gilson, K. M.; Koh, J.; Gibson, P.; Komiti, A.; Jackson, H.; Judd, F.' DOI: 10.1080/13607863.2013.799119 ISSN: 1364-6915 Issue: 8 Journal: Aging & Mental Health Keywords: 'Adaptation, Psychological; Aged; Anxiety/diagnosis/*etiology; Depression/diagnosis/*etiology; Disasters; *Floods; Health Status; Humans; Life Change Events; Middle Aged; Philosophy; Prospective Studies; Psychiatric Status Rating Scales; Risk Factors; Social Support; Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/diagnosis/*etiology; Victoria' Language: eng Notes: '1364-6915 Bei, Bei Bryant, Christina Gilson, Kim-Michelle Koh, Juliana Gibson, Penelope Komiti, Angela Jackson, Henry Judd, Fiona Comparative Study Journal Article England Aging Ment Health. 2013;17(8):992-1002. doi: 10.1080/13607863.2013.799119. Epub 2013 May 28.' Pages: 992-1002 Title: A prospective study of the impact of floods on the mental and physical health of older adults Volume: 17 Year: 2013 _record_number: 18058 _uuid: c3776534-f010-44e8-ae2f-6d069cfaba37 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1080/13607863.2013.799119 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c3776534-f010-44e8-ae2f-6d069cfaba37.yaml identifier: c3776534-f010-44e8-ae2f-6d069cfaba37 uri: /reference/c3776534-f010-44e8-ae2f-6d069cfaba37 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: "Ziska, L.H.\rTeasdale, J.R.\rBunce, J.A." ISSN: 0043-1745 Issue: 5 Journal: Weed Science Pages: 608-615 Title: Future atmospheric carbon dioxide may increase tolerance to glyphosate Volume: 47 Year: 1999 _chapter: '["Ch. 16: Northeast FINAL","Ch. 6: Agriculture FINAL"]' _record_number: 3555 _uuid: c37a868d-ab73-4775-988e-1ad89e14f20e reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/future-atmospheric-carbon-dioxide-may-increase-tolerance-to-glyphosate href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c37a868d-ab73-4775-988e-1ad89e14f20e.yaml identifier: c37a868d-ab73-4775-988e-1ad89e14f20e uri: /reference/c37a868d-ab73-4775-988e-1ad89e14f20e - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: DOD Pages: 64 Publisher: U.S. Department of Defense Title: Quadrennial Defense Review URL: http://archive.defense.gov/pubs/2014_quadrennial_defense_review.pdf Year: 2014 _record_number: 18839 _uuid: c384aa7b-c81d-4295-895b-429a985d376c reftype: Report child_publication: /report/dod-qdr-2014 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c384aa7b-c81d-4295-895b-429a985d376c.yaml identifier: c384aa7b-c81d-4295-895b-429a985d376c uri: /reference/c384aa7b-c81d-4295-895b-429a985d376c - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: IPCC Pages: 1132 Place Published: 'Cambridge, UK and New York, NY' Publisher: Cambridge University Press Secondary Author: 'Field, C.B.; Barros, V.R.; Dokken, D. J.; Mach,K.J.; Mastrandrea, M.D.; Bilir, T. E.; Chatterjee, M.; Ebi,K.L.; Estrada,Y.O.; Genova, R. C.; Girma,B.; Kissel, E. S.; Levy, A. N.; MacCracken, S.; Mastrandrea, P. R.; White, L. L.' Title: 'Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability. Part A: Global and Sectoral Aspects. Contribution of Working Group II to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change' URL: http://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar5/wg2/ Year: 2014 _record_number: 17681 _uuid: c390e13f-8517-40a9-a236-ac4dede3a7a0 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/ipcc-ar5-wg2-parta href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c390e13f-8517-40a9-a236-ac4dede3a7a0.yaml identifier: c390e13f-8517-40a9-a236-ac4dede3a7a0 uri: /reference/c390e13f-8517-40a9-a236-ac4dede3a7a0 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'BACKGROUND: Despite the availability of effective treatment, minority children continue to experience disproportionate morbidity from asthma. Our objective was to identify and characterize racial and ethnic disparities in health-care utilization and medication usage among US children with asthma in a large multistate asthma survey. METHODS: We analyzed questions from the 2003-2004 four-state sample of the National Asthma Survey to assess symptom control, medication use, and health-care utilization among white, black, and Hispanic children < 18 years old with current asthma who were residing in Alabama, California, Illinois, or Texas. RESULTS: Of the 1,485 children surveyed, 55% were white, 25% were Hispanic, and 20% were black. Twice as many black children had asthma-related ED visits (39% vs 18%, respectively; p < 0.001) and hospitalizations (12% vs 5%, respectively; p = 0.02) compared with white children. Significantly fewer black and Hispanic children reported using inhaled corticosteroids (ICSs) in the past 3 months (21% and 22%, respectively) compared to white children (33%; p = 0.001). Additionally, 26% of black children and 19% of Hispanic children reported receiving a daily dose of a short-acting beta-agonist compared with 12% of white children (p = 0.001). ED visits were positively correlated with short-acting beta-agonist use and were negatively correlated with ICS use when stratified by race/ethnicity. CONCLUSIONS: Children with asthma in this large, multistate survey showed a dramatic underuse of ICSs. Black and Hispanic children compared with white children had more indicators of poorly controlled asthma, including increased emergency health-care utilization, more daily rescue medication use, and lower use of ICSs, regardless of symptom control.' Author: 'Crocker, D.; Brown, C.; Moolenaar, R.; Moorman, J.; Bailey, C.; Mannino, D.; Holguin, F.' DOI: 10.1378/chest.09-0013 Date: Oct ISSN: 1931-3543 Issue: 4 Journal: Chest Keywords: 'Administration, Inhalation; Adolescent; Adrenal Cortex Hormones/administration & dosage/therapeutic use; Adrenergic beta-Agonists/therapeutic use; African Continental Ancestry Group; Alabama; Anti-Asthmatic Agents/*therapeutic use; Asthma/*therapy; California; Child; Continental Population Groups; Emergency Service, Hospital/utilization; Ethnic Groups; European Continental Ancestry Group; Health Services/*utilization; Health Surveys; Hispanic Americans; Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data; Humans; Illinois; Interviews as Topic' Language: eng Notes: "1931-3543 Crocker, Deidre Brown, Clive Moolenaar, Ronald Moorman, Jeanne Bailey, Cathy Mannino, David Holguin, Fernando Comparative Study Journal Article Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S. United States Chest. 2009 Oct;136(4):1063-71. doi: 10.1378/chest.09-0013. Epub 2009 Jun 30." Pages: 1063-1071 Title: 'Racial and ethnic disparities in asthma medication usage and health-care utilization: Data from the National Asthma Survey' Volume: 136 Year: 2009 _record_number: 18451 _uuid: c3bb3479-982f-4a2c-89e4-5278fa52490e reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1378/chest.09-0013 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c3bb3479-982f-4a2c-89e4-5278fa52490e.yaml identifier: c3bb3479-982f-4a2c-89e4-5278fa52490e uri: /reference/c3bb3479-982f-4a2c-89e4-5278fa52490e - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Schwartz, Joel; Samet, Jonathan M.; Patz, Jonathan A.' DOI: 10.1097/01.ede.0000134875.15919.0f ISSN: 1531-5487 Issue: 6 Journal: Epidemiology Pages: 755-761 Title: 'Hospital admissions for heart disease: The effects of temperature and humidity' Volume: 15 Year: 2004 _chapter: Ch2 _record_number: 17618 _uuid: c3c2dea7-0420-4f9a-b18b-41ac5641255a reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1097/01.ede.0000134875.15919.0f href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c3c2dea7-0420-4f9a-b18b-41ac5641255a.yaml identifier: c3c2dea7-0420-4f9a-b18b-41ac5641255a uri: /reference/c3c2dea7-0420-4f9a-b18b-41ac5641255a - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'Temporal variation in the abundance of the encephalitis virus vector mosquito, Culex tarsalis Coquillet, was linked significantly with coincident and antecedent measures of regional climate, including temperature, precipitation, snow pack, and the El Nino/Southern Oscillation anomaly. Although variable among traps, historical records that spanned two to five decades revealed climate influences on spring and summer mosquito abundance as early as the previous fall through early summer. Correlations between winter and spring precipitation and snow pack and spring Cx. tarsalis abundance were stronger than correlations with summer abundance. Spring abundance was also correlated positively with winter and spring temperature, whereas summer abundance correlated negatively with spring temperature and not significantly with summer temperature. Correlations with antecedent climate provide the opportunity to forecast vector abundance and therefore encephalitis virus risk, a capability useful in intervention decision support systems at local and state levels.' Author: 'Reisen, W. K.; Cayan, D.; Tyree, M.; Barker, C. M.; Eldridge, B.; Dettinger, M.' DOI: '10.3376/1081-1710(2008)33[89:iocvom]2.0.co;2' Date: Jun ISSN: 1948-7134 Issue: 1 Journal: Journal of Vector Ecology Keywords: Animals; California; *Climate; Culex/*growth & development; Environmental Monitoring; Geography; Seasons; Temperature Notes: "Reisen, William K Cayan, Daniel Tyree, Mary Barker, Christopher M Eldridge, Bruce Dettinger, Michael eng AI55607/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/ Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. 2008/08/14 09:00 J Vector Ecol. 2008 Jun;33(1):89-98." Pages: 89-98 Title: Impact of climate variation on mosquito abundance in California Volume: 33 Year: 2008 _record_number: 18026 _uuid: c3fa0d45-e602-4539-b0d8-98516bcee406 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.3376/1081-1710(2008)33%5B89:iocvom%5D2.0.co;2 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c3fa0d45-e602-4539-b0d8-98516bcee406.yaml identifier: c3fa0d45-e602-4539-b0d8-98516bcee406 uri: /reference/c3fa0d45-e602-4539-b0d8-98516bcee406 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'McKinney, Nathan; Houser, Chris; Meyer-Arendt, Klaus' DOI: 10.1007/s00484-010-0370-9 ISSN: 1432-1254 Issue: 4 Journal: International Journal of Biometeorology Pages: 533-546 Title: Direct and indirect mortality in Florida during the 2004 hurricane season Volume: 55 Year: 2011 _chapter: Ch7 _record_number: 17786 _uuid: c43fa066-6d7b-481b-9a85-22da8c27243a reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1007/s00484-010-0370-9 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c43fa066-6d7b-481b-9a85-22da8c27243a.yaml identifier: c43fa066-6d7b-481b-9a85-22da8c27243a uri: /reference/c43fa066-6d7b-481b-9a85-22da8c27243a - attrs: .publisher: Springer Netherlands .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'National-scale health impact assessments (HIAs) have been conducted for many years and have become reasonably systematized. Recently, there has been growing interest in utilizing HIA methods at local scales, in the context of Environmental Public Health Tracking and in other settings. This paper investigates the data and analytical challenges to estimating the incidence of health effects associated with changes in air pollution concentrations at the local scale, focusing on ozone and fine particulate matter. Although it could be argued that the local-scale HIA is simply a more geographically discrete version of the national-scale assessment and, therefore, has similar challenges, in practice, many key inputs in national-scale assessments are assumed to be spatially uniform or vary only at coarse geographic resolution. For a national-scale assessment, this assumption may not contribute appreciable bias, but the bias could be significant for any individual location. Thus, local-scale assessments require more geographically resolved air quality data, concentration–response (C-R) functions, and baseline incidence rates than are often used. However, comprehensive local data may not be available, may be incomplete, or may be time-intensive and resource-intensive to develop, especially for C-R functions for which small-scale epidemiological studies will often be underpowered. Given this context, this paper considers how best to develop credible local-scale HIAs, identifying factors that contribute to variability across geographic areas, study designs, and time periods. This paper also describes which key sources of analytical uncertainty change as the scope shifts from the national to the local scale. These challenges notwithstanding, the paper concludes that a well-designed local-scale HIA, following key principles and recommendations, can be both informative and defensible.' Author: 'Hubbell, Bryan; Fann, Neal; Levy, Jonathan' DOI: 10.1007/s11869-009-0037-z ISSN: 1873-9326 Issue: 2 Journal: 'Air Quality, Atmosphere & Health' Keywords: Environment Pages: 99-110 Title: 'Methodological considerations in developing local-scale health impact assessments: Balancing national, regional, and local data' Volume: 2 Year: 2009 _record_number: 18897 _uuid: c477f64b-443e-499e-a1c9-df7581fd0e6b reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1007/s11869-009-0037-z href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c477f64b-443e-499e-a1c9-df7581fd0e6b.yaml identifier: c477f64b-443e-499e-a1c9-df7581fd0e6b uri: /reference/c477f64b-443e-499e-a1c9-df7581fd0e6b - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: USGS ISBN: U.S. Geological Survey Fact Sheet 2012-3095 Pages: 4 Title: 'Wildfire Effects on Source-Water Quality: Lessons from Fourmile Canyon Fire, Colorado, and Implications for Drinking-Water Treatment' URL: http://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/2012/3095/FS12-3095.pdf Year: 2012 _record_number: 19198 _uuid: c4867dd0-2760-43d8-9de4-169489829c28 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/usgs-factsheet-2012-3095 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c4867dd0-2760-43d8-9de4-169489829c28.yaml identifier: c4867dd0-2760-43d8-9de4-169489829c28 uri: /reference/c4867dd0-2760-43d8-9de4-169489829c28 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Ruuhela, Reija; Hiltunen, Laura; Venäläinen, Ari; Pirinen, Pentti; Partonen, Timo' DOI: 10.1007/s00484-008-0200-5 ISSN: 1432-1254 Issue: 2 Journal: International Journal of Biometeorology Pages: 167-175 Title: Climate impact on suicide rates in Finland from 1971 to 2003 Volume: 53 Year: 2009 _record_number: 18219 _uuid: c4ccbd18-fb2f-44df-abe4-5446b34b3c4d reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1007/s00484-008-0200-5 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c4ccbd18-fb2f-44df-abe4-5446b34b3c4d.yaml identifier: c4ccbd18-fb2f-44df-abe4-5446b34b3c4d uri: /reference/c4ccbd18-fb2f-44df-abe4-5446b34b3c4d