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Predictors Associated with Health-Related Heat Risk Perception of Urban Citizens in Germany
[journal article]
Abstract The rising probability of extremely high temperatures and an increasing number of consecutive hot days caused by climate change - combined with the impact of these high temperatures on human health - is widely discussed in the literature. There are calls for the development of heatwave adaptation me... view more
The rising probability of extremely high temperatures and an increasing number of consecutive hot days caused by climate change - combined with the impact of these high temperatures on human health - is widely discussed in the literature. There are calls for the development of heatwave adaptation measures by governmental and scientific institutions. In this research, the predictors of health-related heat risk perception of urban citizens in Augsburg, Germany, were investigated. An online survey was conducted with 468 citizens, asking about their heat risk perception, knowledge about heat risks, and demographic data and health information. Statistical methods (Spearman correlation, unpaired t-test, ANOVA and multiple regression) were used to determine which factors were significant and relevant. The results show that the knowledge of heat risks, heat risk sensitivity and an external locus of control are the most important factors for heat risk perception. The health implication score and chronic disease show significant effects in descriptive statistics. Furthermore, younger people showed the highest heat risk perception of all age groups. Surprisingly, income, education, living alone and gender did not play a role in heat risk perception. The findings imply a need for better and intensified heat risk communication in urban areas - especially among elderly people - and thus are important for creating acceptance towards heat wave risks, which is a prerequisite of willingness to adapt.... view less
Keywords
Federal Republic of Germany; risk assessment; knowledge; climate change; damage to one's health; adaptation; perception; urban population
Classification
Ecology, Environment
Health Policy
Free Keywords
heat risk perception; heat wave; health risks; Bedrohung und Vulnerabilität (ZIS 179); Internale-Externale-Kontrollüberzeugung-4 (IE-4) (ZIS 184)
Document language
English
Publication Year
2020
Page/Pages
p. 1-11
Journal
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17 (2020) 3
Issue topic
Climate Change Adaptation and Risk Reduction
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17030874
ISSN
1660-4601
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed