Long-term effects of a coalmine fire on hospital and ambulance use: An interrupted time series study

In 2014, the Hazelwood coalmine fire in regional Victoria, Australia shrouded nearby communities in smoke for six weeks. Prior investigations identified substantial adverse effects, including increases in the use of health services. In this study, we examined the effects on hospital and ambulance us...

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Published inEnvironmental research Vol. 261; p. 119693
Main Authors Lane, Tyler J., Smith, Catherine L., Gao, Caroline X., Ikin, Jillian F., Xu, Rongbin, Carroll, Matthew T.C., Nehme, Emily, Abramson, Michael J., Guo, Yuming
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier Inc 15.11.2024
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Summary:In 2014, the Hazelwood coalmine fire in regional Victoria, Australia shrouded nearby communities in smoke for six weeks. Prior investigations identified substantial adverse effects, including increases in the use of health services. In this study, we examined the effects on hospital and ambulance use in the eight years following the fire. Using Victorian hospital (Jan 2009–Jun 2022) and ambulance (Jan 2013–Dec 2021) data, we conducted an interrupted time series of changes to the rate of hospital admissions, emergency presentations, and ambulance attendances. A categorical exposure model compared two locations, most-exposed Morwell and less-exposed Latrobe Valley, to the rest of regional Victoria. A continuous exposure model used spatial estimates of fire-related PM2.5. Analyses were stratified by sex, age group (<65/65+ years), and condition (cardiovascular, respiratory, mental health, injury). There were small but significant increases in overall hospital admissions and emergency presentations across all analyses, but little evidence of change in overall ambulance attendances. Effects varied considerably by condition, with the biggest relative increases observed among hospital admissions for mental health conditions and injuries. While cardiovascular-related hospital admissions and emergency presentations increased post-fire, ambulance attendances decreased. Our findings suggest the Hazelwood coalmine fire likely increased hospital usage. However, it is unclear whether this was due to the direct effects of smoke exposure on health, or the disruptive socioeconomic and behavioural impacts of an environmental disaster that affected how communities engaged with various health services. •Overall hospital use in smoke-affected areas increased, no change in ambulance use.•Mental health and injury-related conditions increased the most proportionally.•Cardiovascular-related hospital use increased while ambulance use decreased.•Unclear whether effects are due to smoke exposure or disruption from a disaster.
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ISSN:0013-9351
1096-0953
1096-0953
DOI:10.1016/j.envres.2024.119693