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. 2019 Sep 7;60(7):e535–e547. doi: 10.1093/geront/gnz123

Table 1.

Description of Included Studies

Author (year) Purpose Study design Disease state studied Type of disaster Sample size and description Findings specific to outcomes of interesta
Kirizuka et al. (1997) Examine whether an earthquake disturbs glycemic control in diabetic patients Cohort analysis Diabetes Earthquake Diabetic patients in Japan (n = 177) HbA1c levels for patients increased from 7.74% (± 1.82) before the earthquake to 8.34% (± 2.07), p < .01 ~2 mo after earthquake.
Nishikawa et al. (2015) Assess the effect of an earthquake on diabetes outpatient care Cohort analysis Diabetes (type 2) Earthquake Diabetic patients in Japan (n = 575) No significant differences in mean HbA1c levels were observed among disaster-affected patients with type 2 diabetes.
Ohkouchi et al. (2013) Examine long-term health effects and exacerbations of existing conditions associated with the East Japan Earthquake Cohort analysis COPD Earthquake Patients admitted to respiratory units Hospital in Japan from March 11 to April 10, 2010 (n = 447) and also from March 11 to April 10, 2011 (n = 1,223) COPD exacerbations were 2.5 times higher from March to April in the earthquake year (2011) than the year before.
Sugisawa et al. (2017) Explore factors related to earthquake preparedness in Japanese hemodialysis patients Cross-sectional ESRD Earthquake Chronic kidney disease patients in Japan (n = 1,841) Patients with higher social support from family (OR 1.080 [95% CI 1.029, 1.132], p = .002) and friends (OR 1.078 [95% CI 1.042, 1.115], p = .001) scored higher on earthquake preparedness measure.
Anderson et al. (2009) Examine the extent of missed dialysis sessions after Hurricane Katrina and the factors that contributed missed sessions Cross-sectional ESRD Hurricane Hemodialysis patients near New Orleans, LA (n = 386) Adults aged 65 or over were less likely to miss 1–2 dialysis sessions after disaster than participants younger than 50 (OR 2.44 [95% CI 1.21, 4.95]).
Gotanda et al. (2015) Evaluate older adults’ emergency department and hospital use in lower Manhattan after Hurricane Sandy Cohort analysis Overall ED usage Hurricane ED visits (n = 3513) and hospitalizations (n = 940) to Beth Israel Medical Center (New York, NY) between May 7, 2012 and April 28, 2013. (Sample size given for pre-Sandy and immediately post-Sandy time periods.) ED visits and hospital admissions for dialysis-related concerns increased across all age groups studied (18–64, 65–79, and 80+), p < .05
Hyre et al. (2007) Assess PTSD symptoms and dialysis-related factors (among others) after Hurricane Katrina landfall Cross-sectional ESRD Hurricane Hemodialysis patients near New Orleans, LA (n = 391) 24% of patients experienced PTSD, with no significant differences observed for adults aged 50–64 (adj. prevalence ratio 1.24 [95% CI 0.87, 1.77]) or 65+ (adj. prevalence ratio 1.00 [95% CI 0.65, 1.54]) with respect to adults younger than 50.
Lee et al. (2016) Assess geographic distribution and postdisaster medical needs of different Hurricane Sandy evacuation zones Cohort analysis Diabetes Hurricane ED visits in New York City in 2012 (n = 50,996 records pre-hurricane, n = 46,131 post-hurricane) Following Hurricane Sandy landfall, the proportion of adults aged 65+ that visited the ED with a secondary diagnosis of diabetes increased from 50% to 60% (p < .01).
Lurie et al. (2015) Evaluate outcomes for ESRD patients who received early dialysis before Hurricane Sandy Cohort analysis ESRD Hurricane Hemodialysis patients in New York City and New Jersey (n = 13,836) Patients undergoing early dialysis before the hurricane were less likely to visit the ED (OR 0.75 [95% CI 0.63, 0.89]) or be hospitalized (OR 0.77 [95% CI 0.65, 0.92]) during the week of the hurricane than patients who did not undergo early dialysis.
Malik et al. (2018) Evaluate the acute impact of disasters on diabetic patients using the ED Cohort analysis ED visits Hurricane ED visits in 2012 before and after Hurricane Sandy (sample size not reported) Medicare patients presenting to an ED with a primary diagnosis of diabetes increased proportionately (from 41% to 55%, p = .04).
Sharma et al. (2008) Characterize ED visits for chronic disease conditions at emergency departments after Hurricane Katrina Cross-sectional ESRD/diabetes Hurricane ED visits in hospitals near New Orleans, LA, from September 8 to October 22, 2005 (n = 21673 ED visits) After Hurricane Katrina, (i) renal failure accounted for 2.5% of ED visits among all patients; (ii) renal failure accounted for 14% of ED visits by adults aged 80 or older; and (iii) diabetic concerns accounted for 7% of ED visits by adults aged 80 or older.
Delfino et al. (2009) To evaluate the relationship of cardiorespiratory outcomes to wildfire-related particulate matter (PM2.5) during California wildfires in October 2003 Cohort analysis COPD/CHF Wildfire Hospital admissions in southern California, from October 1 to November 15, 2003 (n = 40,856 visits) COPD-related hospital admissions were smaller for adults aged 65 and older (3%, no CI reported) compared with adults aged 20–64 (7% [95% CI 0.9, 13.1]).
Mott et al. (2005) To determine the effects of wildfires on cardiorespiratory hospitalizations and re-admissions, and to examine longer-term health effects Cohort analysis COPD/CHF Wildfire Hospitalization records in the Kuching region of Malaysia from January 1, 1995 to December 31, 1998 (n = 190,016). Wildfire was associated with a smaller increase in COPD-related ED visits for those aged 65+ (42%) versus 50% for patients aged 40–64.
Parthum et al. (2017) Geospatially analyze public health outcomes related to wildfire smoke Cohort analysis COPD/CHF Wildfire ED visits in the Tidewater region of Virginia from June 9 to October 13, 2008 (n = 548) Wildfire was associated with increased likelihood of COPD-related (cRR 1.73 [95% CI 1.06, 2.83] for adults 18+ [65+ not specifically reported]) and CHF-related (cRR 1.37 [95% CI 1.01, 1.85] for adults 65+, 18–64 not studied) ED visits in exposed counties during the wildfire.
Rappold et al. (2011) Investigate health effects associated with air pollution from wildfires Cohort analysis COPD/CHF Wildfire ED visits in North Carolina, USA between June 1 and July 14, 2008 COPD results for adults aged 65+ (cRR 1.48 [95% CI 0.74, 2.97]) and CHF results for both age groups (cRR 1.34 [95% CI 0.78, 2.32] and 1.29 [95% CI 0.89, 1.87], respectively) were not significant. Adults younger than 65 had increased COPD outcomes (cRR 2.02 [95% CI 1, 4.05]) in wildfire-exposed counties compared with referent counties.
Reid et al. (2016) Examine the effects of long wildfire exposure on cardiorespiratory outcomes interpreted across geography and time Cohort analysis COPD/CHF Wildfire 102,311 hospitalizations and ED visits in northern California from May 6 to September 15, 2008 A 5 µg/m3 increase in PM2.5 emissions from wildfire was associated with an overall increase in COPD-related ED visits (RR 1.022 [95% CI 1.006, 1.039]), significant for adults aged 20–64 (RR 1.062 [95% CI 1.033, 1.092]), but not for adults 65+ (RR 1.002 [95% CI 0.979, 1.026]).
Tinling et al. (2016) Examine the relationship between cardiorespiratory outcomes and wildfire smoke exposure in an attempt to replicate a previous study on a similar fire Cohort analysis COPD/CHF Wildfire ED visits in 28 North Carolina counties between May 5 and June 19, 2011 (57,650 records) No significant association was observed in older adults between COPD and PM2.5 [cRR 0.92 (95% CI 0.83, 1.02)] or between CHF and PM2.5 (cRR 0.92 [95% CI 0.84, 1.01]).

Notes: CI = confidence interval; cRR = cumulative relative risk; ED = emergency department; OR = odds ratio; PM2.5 = particulate matter ≤ 2.5 µm in diameter. aEffect size reported when available.