Skip to main content

Preprints

Filtering by Subject: Environmental Public Health

Stadiums as climate-exposed socio-technical infrastructures: a scoping review of fragmented risks and emerging challenges

Dimitri Defrance, TIffanie Lescure

Published: 2026-01-27
Subjects: Civil and Environmental Engineering, Environmental Public Health, Environmental Studies

Stadiums are among the most climate-sensitive infrastructures in global sport, yet the evidence available to characterise their climate-related risks remains fragmented. Although billions of spectators attend sporting events each year and climate change is recognised as a multiplier of existing hazards, research on stadium environments continues to treat risks separately. Heat is examined through [...]

Cervical Cancer and Climate Change

Elisabeth Callen, Tarin Clay, Allene Whitney, et al.

Published: 2026-01-09
Subjects: Environmental Public Health, Environmental Sciences, Other Environmental Sciences

Background: The research question guiding this scoping review was: "What does the literature reveal (since January 1, 2005) about the association between climate change—or its underlying environmental drivers—and cervical cancer?" Methods: We conducted a comprehensive literature search using two major electronic databases: PubMed and Web of Science, for January 1, 2005, through July 30, 2024. 522 [...]

Modeling Daily Plume Specific Smoke Concentrations for Health Effects Studies with Estimates of Fire Size, Plume Age, and Fuel Type

SAM D FAULSTICH, Matthew J. Strickland, Yan Liu, et al.

Published: 2025-05-15
Subjects: Atmospheric Sciences, Environmental Health and Protection, Environmental Public Health, Statistical Models, Transport Phenomena

Inhaling smoke PM2.5 can cause adverse health effects ranging from acute (e.g., lung irritation) to chronic (e.g., lung cancer). Acute health effects have immediate implications for public health, requiring rapid response to minimize harm during an exposure window. Estimating acute health effects requires short-term (e.g., daily) estimates of fire-specific smoke PM2.5 concentrations at ground [...]

Rethinking Environmental Sustainability in the Operating Room: Beyond the Reusability Assumption for Surgical Instruments

Francesca Marsili

Published: 2025-02-21
Subjects: Environmental Public Health, Medicine and Health Sciences, Public Health

Addressing the climate crisis is an urgent global priority, yet the healthcare sector continues to face significant challenges in implementing long-term green solutions. The sector accounts for 4.4% of global carbon emissions, with an even greater impact of 7% in the Netherlands. The latest Dutch report- Barometer Groene OK- proposes ten key measures to reduce the healthcare carbon footprint, [...]

Beyond land surface temperature: identifying areas of daytime thermal discomfort in cities by combining remote sensing and field measurements.

Julie C Fahy, Christoph Bachofen, Reto Camponovo, et al.

Published: 2024-12-20
Subjects: Environmental Health and Protection, Environmental Monitoring, Environmental Public Health, Other Environmental Sciences, Sustainability

Satellite images of land surface temperatures (LST) are commonly used to identify areas within cities most prone to diurnal thermal discomfort, but they may not reflect the experiences of pedestrians. Here, we developed predictive statistical models for Physiological Equivalent Temperature (PET), an indicator of thermal discomfort, with easily accessible spatial predictors. For this, we measured [...]

Carbon dioxide removal could perpetuate community-scale inequalities of U.S. air pollution in net-zero scenarios

Candelaria Bergero, Jing Cheng, Qiang Zhang, et al.

Published: 2024-11-28
Subjects: Environmental Public Health, Environmental Sciences, Environmental Studies

Pathways to net-zero reduce GHG emissions and improve air quality, but the magnitude and distribution of these improvements will depend on specific mitigation decisions, such as the amount of carbon dioxide removals (CDR). Here, we combine a series of models and datasets to analyze community-scale PM2.5 impacts across the contiguous U.S. of net-zero scenarios with different levels of CDR. Both [...]

Heatwaves and Hostilities - Can rising temperatures lead to lasting peace?

Fils Jean Pierre Mutsinzi

Published: 2024-09-13
Subjects: Bioresource and Agricultural Engineering, Earth Sciences, Environmental Public Health, Environmental Sciences, Environmental Studies, International and Area Studies, Nature and Society Relations, Operations Research, Systems Engineering and Industrial Engineering, Other Earth Sciences, Public Health, Social and Behavioral Sciences

In this paper, we are going to explore the complex relationship between climate change and global peace. Climate change and wars have a reciprocal relationship. As the war fuels climate change, the latter can catalyze the war too. Through the analysis of the ongoing conflicts across the world, recent technological advancements, and the globalized nature of the world, we will review different [...]

Loss of Schooling from Tropical Cyclones: Evidence from 13 Low- and Middle-income Countries

Renzhi Jing, Sam Heft-Neal, Zetianyu Wang, et al.

Published: 2024-06-19
Subjects: Environmental Public Health, Environmental Studies

Increasing educational attainment is one of the most important and effective tools for health and economic improvements. The extent to which extreme climate events disrupt education, resulting in fewer years of schooling and reduced educational attainment, remains under-studied. Children in low- and middle-income countries may be uniquely vulnerable to loss of schooling after such disasters due [...]

Evaluating estimation methods for wildfire smoke and their implications for assessing health effects

Minghao Qiu, Makoto Kelp, Sam Heft-Neal, et al.

Published: 2024-06-13
Subjects: Environmental Health and Protection, Environmental Public Health, Environmental Sciences, Public Health

Growing wildfire smoke represents a substantial threat to air quality and human health in the US and across much of the globe. However, the impact of wildfire smoke on human health remains imprecisely understood, due to uncertainties in both the measurement of population wildfire smoke exposure and dose-response functions linking exposure to health. Here, we compare daily wildfire smoke-related [...]

Assessing the climate and health impacts of energy consumption in European Union countries

Gen Pei, Jonathan Buonocore, Parichehr Salimifard, et al.

Published: 2024-01-25
Subjects: Environmental Public Health

************************************************************************************************************** Note: This article has been published in Environmental Research Letters. Please refer to the published version: https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/add752 ************************************************************************************************************** Greenhouse gas emissions [...]

Designing and describing climate change impact attribution studies: a guide to common approaches

Colin J Carlson, Dann Mitchell, Tamma Carleton, et al.

Published: 2024-01-06
Subjects: Climate, Earth Sciences, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Environmental Public Health, Environmental Studies, Human Geography, Physical and Environmental Geography, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Probability, Public Health, Spatial Science, Statistical Methodology, Statistical Models, Statistics and Probability

Impact attribution is an emerging transdisciplinary sub-discipline of detection and attribution, focused on the social, economic, and ecological impacts of climate change. Here, we provide an overview of common end-to-end frameworks in impact attribution, focusing on examples relating to the human health impacts of climate change. We propose a typology of study designs based on whether [...]

Indoor and Ambient Influences on PM2.5 Exposure and Well-being for a Rail Impacted Community and Implications for Personal Protections

Ivette Torres, Khanh Do, Andrea Delgado, et al.

Published: 2023-11-30
Subjects: Civil and Environmental Engineering, Environmental Public Health

Background. Higher air pollution concentrations can be observed near rail networks, local and highway automobile corridors, and shipyards. Communities adjacent to such sources are disproportionately exposed to air pollution from these stationary and mobile sources. One such community is West San Bernardino in California, where households are feet away from the Burlington Northern Santa Fe [...]

Quantifying greenspace with satellite images in Karachi, Pakistan using a new data augmentation paradigm

Miao Zhang, Hajra Arshad, Manzar Abbas, et al.

Published: 2023-06-18
Subjects: Environmental Public Health, Other Computer Sciences

Greenspaces in communities are critical for mitigating effects of climate change and have important impacts on health. Today, the availability of satellite imagery data combined with deep learning methods allows for automated greenspace analysis at high resolution. We propose a novel green color augmentation for deep learning model training to better detect and delineate types of greenspace [...]

Listening to Manchester: Using citizen science Raspberry Shake seismometers to quantify road traffic

David Healy

Published: 2023-05-31
Subjects: Civil and Environmental Engineering, Earth Sciences, Environmental Public Health, Environmental Sciences, Environmental Studies, Human Geography

Road traffic is a major contributor to greenhouse gases in our cities. This study has been designed to test whether low-cost citizen science seismometers (Raspberry Shakes) can be used to quantify temporal and spatial variations in road traffic. I used a network of seismometers installed around Greater Manchester to record signals in the frequency range 1-50 Hz. Data were processed using the open [...]

Understanding and Assessing Demographic (In)Equity Resulting from Extreme Heat Exposure due to Lack of Tree Canopies in Norfolk, VA using Agent-Based Modeling

Virginia Zamponi, Kevin Obrien, Erik Jensen, et al.

Published: 2023-03-31
Subjects: Biodiversity, Environmental Public Health, Environmental Studies, Human Geography, Public Health, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Statistics and Probability

Prolonged exposure to extreme heat can result in illness and death. In urban areas of dense concentrations of pavement, buildings, and other surfaces that absorb and retain heat, extreme heat conditions can arise regularly and create harmful environmental exposures for residents daily during certain parts of the year. Tree canopies provide shade and help to cool the environment, making mature [...]

search

You can search by:

  • Title
  • Keywords
  • Author Name
  • Author Affiliation