Award Abstract # 2045663
CAREER: Coupling Climate and Human Health Models to Build Pathways to Extreme Heat Resilience

NSF Org: CMMI
Division of Civil, Mechanical, and Manufacturing Innovation
Recipient: ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY
Initial Amendment Date: June 16, 2021
Latest Amendment Date: February 23, 2023
Award Number: 2045663
Award Instrument: Standard Grant
Program Manager: Daan Liang
dliang@nsf.gov
 (703)292-2441
CMMI
 Division of Civil, Mechanical, and Manufacturing Innovation
ENG
 Directorate for Engineering
Start Date: July 1, 2021
End Date: June 30, 2026 (Estimated)
Total Intended Award Amount: $631,273.00
Total Awarded Amount to Date: $647,273.00
Funds Obligated to Date: FY 2021 = $631,273.00
FY 2023 = $16,000.00
History of Investigator:
  • Jennifer Vanos (Principal Investigator)
    jvanos@asu.edu
Recipient Sponsored Research Office: Arizona State University
660 S MILL AVENUE STE 204
TEMPE
AZ  US  85281-3670
(480)965-5479
Sponsor Congressional District: 04
Primary Place of Performance: AZ Board of Regents on behalf of Arizona State University
PO Box 876011
Tempe
AZ  US  85287-6011
Primary Place of Performance
Congressional District:
04
Unique Entity Identifier (UEI): NTLHJXM55KZ6
Parent UEI:
NSF Program(s): CAREER: FACULTY EARLY CAR DEV,
HDBE-Humans, Disasters, and th
Primary Program Source: 01002324DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
01002122DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
Program Reference Code(s): 040E, 029E, 041E, 1045, 116E, 9231, 9178, 9251, 9102
Program Element Code(s): 104500, 163800
Award Agency Code: 4900
Fund Agency Code: 4900
Assistance Listing Number(s): 47.041

ABSTRACT

Extreme heat is invisible, silent, and deadly, and negatively affects human health and productivity globally. Understanding how people are affected by extreme heat, and how best to cope, is important for societal well-being and economic security. New approaches to adapt to heat are urgently needed as cities grow and temperatures rise. Existing models of present and future heat-health impacts focus on survivability and over-simplify how people respond both physiologically and behaviorally to heat across indoor and outdoor spaces. But survivable does not equal livable??addressing human complexities is needed to fully understand the exposure pathways that cause heat to become a health hazard. The goal of this Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) grant is to advance our scientific understanding of the range of current and future impacts of extreme heat on human health across different climate types and indoor and outdoor environments. Models of human heat balance, regional climate at multiple scales, and building interior heat exposure will be combined with human vulnerability and adaptive capacity to estimate present and future heat-health risks across U.S. cities. This research bridges climate and health research disciplines to support experiential learning and public health guidance to proactively mitigate risk. The outcomes of this research align with NSF?s mission to advance national health, prosperity, and welfare. Given the diverse social, environmental, economic, and health impacts of heat, society will broadly benefit through reduced heat-related illness, death, and hospitalizations, decreased energy costs, and improved well-being, productivity, and community resilience.

To create insight into current and future heat exposures, vulnerabilities, and impacts, this project leverages research across disciplines to 1) quantify differences in heat stress and strain across climate types and built/natural environmental contexts in large U.S. cities, comparing validated human heat balance (HHB) models to simple bioclimate heat metrics; 2) integrate critical physiological and behavioral adaptations into heat-health estimates to account for the range of heat stress and strain responses; and 3) quantify future livability and survivability using HHB models and dynamically downscaled climate models within and across the U.S. These objectives acknowledge that an individual?s path from experiencing hot weather to heat stress, heat strain, and adverse health outcomes is indirect, multidimensional, and non-linear. Three integrated education objectives will (a) create, evaluate, and share novel experiential learning and outreach methods using a new heat chamber in the PI?s lab; (b) co-produce and disseminate practical heat-health guidance with public health collaborators; (c) support and inspire a diverse student population to explore interdisciplinary approaches in STEM. The coupling of human health models with weather and climate data will drive transformative thinking in climate adaptation and heat resilience research, introducing the notion that survivable does not equal livable. Key scientific contributions include a new modeling approach to better understand the range of human responses to heat; a novel assessment of the interactions between climate type, indoor and outdoor environmental contexts, human behavior, and physiology on human tolerance to oppressive heat; and a creative application of physiological advances that validate the use of sustainable, low-cost (i.e., no air conditioning) personal-level cooling strategies and their efficacy in current and projected U.S. climates. This project also advances discovery and promotes experiential and inclusive cross-disciplinary training, learning, and communication for students across education levels. Co-production efforts with public health officials, practitioners, and community members will directly support societal health. Such efforts will further build community-scale heat resilience and ensure that diverse populations benefit from location and person- and context-specific information for safe and sustainable personal cooling methods, heat coping strategies, and effective messaging, outreach, and engagement.

This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.

PUBLICATIONS PRODUCED AS A RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH

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Baldwin, Jane W. and Benmarhnia, Tarik and Ebi, Kristie L. and Jay, Ollie and Lutsko, Nicholas J. and Vanos, Jennifer K. "Humiditys Role in Heat-Related Health Outcomes: A Heated Debate" Environmental Health Perspectives , v.131 , 2023 https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP11807 Citation Details
Nazarian, N. and Krayenhoff, E. S. and Bechtel, B. and Hondula, D. M. and Paolini, R. and Vanos, J. and Cheung, T. and Chow, W. T. and de Dear, R. and Jay, O. and Lee, J. K. and Martilli, A. and Middel, A. and Norford, L. K. and Sadeghi, M. and Schiavon, "Integrated Assessment of Urban Overheating Impacts on Human Life" Earth's Future , v.10 , 2022 https://doi.org/10.1029/2022EF002682 Citation Details
Nelson, Gerald C and Vanos, Jennifer and Havenith, George and Jay, Ollie and Ebi, Kristie L and Hijmans, Robert J "Global reductions in manual agricultural work capacity due to climate change" Global Change Biology , v.30 , 2024 https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.17142 Citation Details
Turner, V Kelly and Middel, Ariane and Vanos, Jennifer K "Shade is an essential solution for hotter cities" Nature , v.619 , 2023 https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-023-02311-3 Citation Details
Vanos, Jennifer and Guzman-Echavarria, Gisel and Baldwin, Jane W. and Bongers, Coen and Ebi, Kristie L. and Jay, Ollie "A physiological approach for assessing human survivability and liveability to heat in a changing climate" Nature Communications , v.14 , 2023 https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-43121-5 Citation Details
Van_Tol, Zachary and Vanos, Jennifer K and Middel, Ariane and Ferguson, Kristin M "Concurrent Heat and Air Pollution Exposures among People Experiencing Homelessness" Environmental Health Perspectives , v.132 , 2024 https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP13402 Citation Details

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