Victoria’s Heat Health Alert warning system and #Heatwave adaptation by @Takvera

In this article, originally published on the Climate Action Moreland site, I take a look at Victoria’s Heat Health Alert system. Heatwave risk management, mitigation and adaptation still lacks proper governance with no mention in Victoria’s Emergency Management Manual, no proper statewide plan, while heat related deaths far outstrips the deaths from other natural disasters such as fire, flood, earthquake or tsunami. This article follows on from my October 2014 article: Are we mitigating the #health risk of worsening #heatwaves due to climate change?

20150103--BOM-Max-temp-2Jan2015-feature

As January maximum temperatures spike into the high 30s and low 40s (degrees Celsius) and minimum overnight temperatures approach 30 degrees, we have had our first Heat Health alert issued by the Victorian Department of Health for 2015.

On Friday 2 January 2015 heatwave conditions enveloped much of southeast Australia with temperatures reaching 43.3°C in Adelaide and 38.7°C in Melbourne.

Overnight temperatures on Friday night (2 January) hovered about 30 degrees in Melbourne and 24.5C in Adelaide. These minimum temperatures are more than enough to disrupt sleep adding to heat stress and associated heat-related health emergencies. (see Grunstein, Too Hot to Sleep? Here’s why, The Conversation, 8 January 2013).

Maximum temperature in Victoria on 3rd January reached 44.6°C at Hopetoun, but many locations recorded over 40°C.

Although Melbourne was predicted to exceed 40°C on Saturday (3 January) the temperature only reached 37.7°C at 3.30pm. That afternoon a storm front brought some rain and relief, a cool change plunging the mercury just before 6pm.

While the heat and windy conditions produced extreme fire weather conditions across much of the state with total fire bans in force, most Victorian fires were able to be managed and contained. In fact, Victoria sent two large air tankers and four Victorian firefighting teams to help fight bushfires in South Australia.

While the hotspell was relatively short, it did cause some infrastructure problems with Jemena reporting electricity outage due to the heatwave in parts of Preston and Coburg.

There was also a small fire reported in the Hazelwood Mine, near Morwell.

Heat Health Alerts

The Victorian Chief Health Officer Dr Rosemary Lester issued a Heat Health alert for Friday 2nd January on 30th December for much of Victoria including Central District, North Central District, South West District, Northern Country District, Mallee District, and Wimmera District. The alert also applied for Saturday 3rd January for Northern Country District.

Heat Health Alerts are advisory messages to Municipal or Shire Councils, hospital, medical and other service providers. “It is not intended to dictate when service providers take action or what actions they should take. Heat health alert recipients are advised to monitor local conditions and respond in accordance with their own heatwave plans, service continuity plans and occupational health and safety (OH&S) plans.” says the Victorian Heatwave plan (2012).

The Victorian Heat Health Alert system 2014-2015 (PDF) is based upon when daily average (or mean) temperatures are predicted to reach and exceed heat health thresholds which are set for each region in the state, based upon Bureau of Meteorology weather forecast districts and boundaries.

The Department of Health defines Heat health temperature threshold as:
“the lower temperature limit above which there is likely to be an impact on human health. There are three heat health temperature thresholds that apply to three broad geographical bands or zones, running horizontally from east to west across Victoria. The highest threshold (mean 34°C) applies to the northernmost (warmest) area of Victoria and the lowest threshold (mean 30°C) applies to the more southern (coolest) area of the state.” (Dept of Health, The Health impacts of the January 2014 heatwave in Victoria, 2014)

20150103-threshold-Tmean-Victoria-heat-health-alert

The mean daily temperature threshold is calculated by the forecast daily maximum temperature plus the forecast daily minimum temperature for the following day (this usually occurrs overnight in the wee hours of the morning).

For Melbourne on January 2 the average temperature forecast was 39 degrees and the minimum overnight and into January 3 morning was forecast to be 30 degrees. Thus the predicted mean temperature for January 2 for Melbourne was:

(39°C MaxT + 30°C MinT)/2 = 34.5°C MeanT

This exceeded the 30°C mean temperature threshold set by the Victorian Department of Health and hence the Heat Health Alert was issued.

In the 2013-2014 summer the Victorian Department of Health issued heat health alerts for 13 days due to temperature thresholds being reached or exceeded.

Climate change will increase the number of hot days exceeding specific temperatures and also lengthen heatwaves, both of which will increase heat related morbidity and mortality without the issue being taken very seriously and the implementation of adaptive strategies and behaviour.

According to the climate Council the number of hot days have doubled in the past 50 years:

Temperature Threshold and increase in mortality

So how was this mean daily temperature of 30 degrees Celsius worked out as the threshold?

It is based at looking at heat related morbidity (illness) and mortality statistics to see at what temperature measure a threshold is past where there is a noticeable increase in mortality or morbidity.

The seminal research work was done in this area by Professor Neville Nicholls and colleagues with the publication of their 2008 paper – A simple heat alert system for Melbourne, Australia. This research used a time series analysis for the period 1996 to 2005 for people 65 years or older and determined for Melbourne a temperature mortality threshold of Mean daily temperature of 30°C, or daily minimum temperature of 24°C.

The initial Victorian heatwave strategy was developed in 2007. The research by Nicholls et al (2008) came too late to include in the state heatwave strategy by the Victorian Department of Health for the 2009 Victorian heatwave events. This event resulted in 374 excess deaths and enormous strain on ambulance services, hospital emergency services, mortuaries and other medical support services.

The Nicholls research did inform the 2009-2010 heatwave framework and then the 2012 Heatwave plan for Victoria.

Margaret Loughnan and colleagues also did research in this area using heart attack/cardiac arrest hospital admissions publishing a paper in 2010 – The effects of summer temperature, age and socioeconomic circumstance on Acute Myocardial Infarction admissions in Melbourne, Australia. This research also used time-series analysis for the study period 1999-2004 for the age group of 35 years or over. It found a temperature morbidity threshold of “30°C daily average temperature and 27°C for three-day average temperature were identified as thresholds above which hospital admissions for acute myocardial infarction increased.”

The 2010 study also found that “both age and socioeconomic inequality contribute to AMI admissions to hospital in Melbourne during hot weather”.

The researchers concluded: “Cardiac disease is a major cause of death and disability and identifying cardiac-specific climate thresholds and the spatio-demographic characteristics of vulnerable groups within populations is an important step towards preventative health care by informing public health officials and providing a guide for an early heat-health warning system. This information is especially important under current climatic conditions and for assessing the future impact of climate change.”

A more in depth study conducted by Loughnan and colleagues and published in 2013 by the National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility – A spatial vulnerability analysis of urban populations during extreme heat events in Australian capital cities – goes into even more detail recommending temperature thresholds for each capital city based upon the best temperature measure to determine a threshold level for mortality.

For Melbourne the optimum measure was daily mortality, where at a Mean daily Temperature of 28°C there was a 3 to 13 percent increase in mortality.

Although the mean temperature (MeanT) is the optimum threshold to use for Melbourne and Brisbane to determine an increase in mortality, for other cities (Sydney, Perth, Hobart, Canberra, Adelaide) the maximum temperature (Tmax) was found to be more suitable. For Darwin it is actually the minimum temperature (Tmin) that is more appropriate to use as a threshold measurement.

See Table 8 from Loughnan et al (2013) below:

20150103-Aus-temp=thresholds-Loughnan-2013

So it seems we have in use in Victoria threshold temperatures higher than that recommended in the latest scientific literature.

The Victorian Department of Health uses a variety of data to determine the Heat Health Alert threshold temperatures, but this information and methodology is opaque to public scrutiny, with no explanation as to why their threshold temperature diverges from the latest scientific recommendation.

The comparison of 2009 and 2014 heatwave events clearly show a reduction in mortality while there is an increase in after hours doctor consultations and ambulance callouts. The Heat Health alert system clearly plays an important role in forewarning and adapting behaviour.

20141014-VAGO-heatwaves-comparison-2009-2014-600w

Auditor General highly critical of heatwave management governance

The Victorian Auditor General in his Heatwave Management report tabled in State Parliament 14 October 2014 was highly critical of the State Government finding critical deficiences in heatwave emergency response and governance.

For a start, the Auditor General’s report identified that the Heatwave Plan for Victoria is not a state-level plan similar in scope to the State Tsunami Emergency Plan and a State Earthquake Emergency Plan, despite heat related deaths being the highest by far from all natural disasters in Victoria and nationally.

Under the Victorian Heatwave Plan document it says “In a heatwave emergency, Victoria Police will be the control agency.”

Yet the Auditor General found “There was no statewide, strategic view of the combined impact of the different emergencies”, in response to the Victoria Police who took issue with the report being critical of the different levels of response and co-ordination to bushfires and heatwave impacts. (See Are we mitigating the #health risk of worsening #heatwaves due to climate change?)

Under the Victorian Emergency Management Act (2013) there is no specific mention of the management of the impacts of heatwaves or hotspells.

Similarly, in the Emergency Management Manual Victoria while fire and flood rate numerous mentions in Part 1 – Emergency Management in Victoria and Part 2 – Emergency Risk Management and Mitigation in Victoria, there is no mention of heatwave or heat related risk management, mitigation or adaptation strategies. This is a huge oversight given the extent of the mortality rate from heat events and the necessity for engaging in mitigation and adaptation strategies and behaviours.

This is even more alarming given the experience of the 2009 Victorian heatwave when not only human health was affected, but also deleterious impacts on electricity provision and transport services which produced a cascading economic and social impact. While much attention has focussed on the danger of bushfires, the combined emergency of heatwave health and bushfire impacts are not being managed strategically.

Extreme Heat remains the silent killer

Deaths from natural hazards in Australia

Deaths from natural hazards in Australia

As Lucinda Coates and colleagues conclude in their landmark 2014 study – Exploring 167 years of vulnerability: An examination of extreme heat events in Australia 1844–2010 – “The dangers from extreme heat within Australia remain neglected, and fundamental changes will not take place until extreme heat is given the priority it deserves as Australia’s number one natural hazard killer.”


Sources:

  • Coates, L., Katharine Haynesa, James O’Briena, John McAneneya, Felipe Dimer de Oliveiraa, (2014) Exploring 167 years of vulnerability: An examination of extreme heat events in Australia 1844–2010. Environmental Science and Policy. Volume 42, October 2014, Pages 33–44 (Full Paper
  • Dept of Health (2014a) Heat Health alert for Friday 2nd January issued 30 December 2014.
  • Dept of Health (2014b), Heat Health Alert system 2014-2015 (PDF)
  • Dept of Health, (2014c) The Health impacts of the January 2014 heatwave in Victoria. (PDF)
  • Dept of Health (2012) Heatwave Plan for Victoria, issued 4 January 2012
  • Emergency Management Victoria, Emergency Management Manual Victoria particularly Part 1 – Emergency Management in Victoria and Part 2 – Emergency Risk Management and Mitigation in Victoria, Accessed 4 January 2015
  • Loughnan, M.E., Nicholls, N. and Tapper, N.J. (2010). The effects of summer temperature, age and socioeconomic circumstance on acute myocardial infarction admissions in Melbourne, Australia. International Journal of Health Geographics 9, 41. (Full Paper)
  • Loughnan, M.E., Tapper, NJ, Phan, T, Lynch, K, McInnes, JA (2013), A spatial vulnerability analysis of urban populations during extreme heat events in Australian capital cities, National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility, Gold Coast, 128 pp. (Full Paper)
  • Nicholls, N., Skinner, C., Loughnan, M. and Tapper, N. (2008). A simple heat alert system for Melbourne, Australia. International Journal of Biometeorology, 52(5), 375-384. (abstract)
  • Victorian Auditor General’s Office (2014) Heatwave Management: Reducing the Risk to Public Health. Report tabled in State Parliament 14 October 2014

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Comments


  1. Have recently moved into a house more than a century old in the North Central region. It is still without insulation and any cooling system apart from a pedestal fan. Have arranged to get some quotes but meanwhile the weather came on in force with a January heat wave exceeding anything I’ve experienced before February! It is extremely hot and dry here and there are several elderly people in the vicinity. What was wonderful is that they all keep an eye on each other and me! I was called and invited in to cool off next door. Heard some commentary on the radio yesterday that often for the elderly it is the third day of a heatwave when their bodies collapse under the sustained stress. Totally agree that a greater priority needs to be given to this. Could not believe the reports that there were still some children found to be left in cars…what needs to be done to ensure people become more aware? It is only going to get worse – even if we had a sensible government acting on climate change a reversal of its effects will take some time.


  2. That is great to hear that everyone watches out for each other. That needs to occurr, along with the heatwave warning by the Bureau of Meteorology, the Department of Health Heat Health Alert System (which I think needs to be tweaked on temperature threshold and in it’s communication to a wider audience), better building regulations for new buildings and support for people to retrofit insulation, high reflectivity or green roofs.

    It is overnight minimum temperatures that appear to be crucial in a heatwave.

    An ambient temperature of 22-23C is ideal for sleep to rest and recover our bodies, but during heatwaves if you don’t have well insulated or air-conditioned housing sleep can be disrupted. According to Ron Grunstein, Professor of Sleep Medicine at University of Sydney, this can produce: negative effects on mood and alertness, problems with complex memory retention, higher judgement (poorer decision making and increased risk-taking behaviour), blood pressure control and regulation of glucose in the body. (see Grunstein, Too Hot to Sleep? Here’s why, The Conversation, 8 January 2013).

    Without the opportunity for our bodies to recover overnight health problems tend to amplify Donna Green explains:

    “Vulnerable people, such as children and the elderly, are especially susceptible to heatwaves because their bodies need to recover in cooler conditions at night in order to prepare for the following day’s heat. So if night time temperatures do not go down sufficiently, the health problems amplify very quickly.” (Green, How heat can make your body melt down from the inside out, The Conversation, 16 January 2014)

    Experience of heatwaves shows us that in extended heatwave periods morbidity (illness) and mortality rates increase as the length of heatwave extends.

    The State Government still hasn’t taken onboard incorporation of heatwave emergency response as part of State Emergency Management planning and response such as for bushfires and floods. This is particularly important as bushfire emergency is also heightened during heatwaves and experience has shown that this crisis of two related emergencies happening simultaneously has not been managed strategically (The Victorian Auditor General’s report pointed this out)

    One of the actions you can take is to write expressing your concerns about heatwave management and why it is not being given the same emergency response status as bushfires, floods, earthquakes and Tsunamis, even though it is responsible for far more deaths. Write a firm but polite letter or email to:

    Hon Jane Garrett, Minister for Emergency Services
    Suite 1, 31 Nicholson Street, Brunswick East, VIC 3057
    Email: jane.garrett@parliament.vic.gov.au