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      Projected trends in high-mortality heatwaves under different scenarios of climate, population, and adaptation in 82 US communities

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          Abstract

          Some rare heatwaves have extreme daily mortality impacts; moderate heatwaves have lower daily impacts but occur much more frequently at present and so account for large aggregated impacts. We applied health-based models to project trends in high-mortality heatwaves, including proportion of all heatwaves expected to be high-mortality, using the definition that a high-mortality heatwave increases mortality risk by ≥20 %. We projected these trends in 82 US communities in 2061–2080 under two scenarios of climate change (RCP4.5, RCP8.5), two scenarios of population change (SSP3, SSP5), and three scenarios of community adaptation to heat (none, lagged, on-pace) for large- and medium-ensemble versions of the National Center for Atmospheric Research’s Community Earth System Model. More high-mortality heatwaves were expected compared to present under all scenarios except on-pace adaptation, and population exposure was expected to increase under all scenarios. At least seven more high-mortality heatwaves were expected in a twenty-year period in the 82 study communities under RCP8.5 than RCP4.5 when assuming no adaptation. However, high-mortality heatwaves were expected to remain <1 % of all heatwaves and heatwave exposure under all scenarios. Projections were most strongly influenced by the adaptation scenario— going from a scenario of on-pace to lagged adaptation or from lagged to no adaptation more than doubled the projected number of and exposure to high-mortality heatwaves. Based on our results, fewer high-mortality heatwaves are expected when following RCP4.5 versus RCP8.5 and under higher levels of adaptation, but high-mortality heatwaves are expected to remain a very small proportion of total heatwave exposure.

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          Most cited references36

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          RCP 8.5—A scenario of comparatively high greenhouse gas emissions

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            Applied Predictive Modeling

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              RCP4.5: a pathway for stabilization of radiative forcing by 2100

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                101087507
                29126
                Clim Change
                Clim Change
                Climatic change
                0165-0009
                3 November 2016
                30 August 2016
                February 2018
                01 February 2019
                : 146
                : 3-4
                : 455-470
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Environmental & Radiological Health Sciences, Colorado State University, Lake Street, Fort Collins, CO 80521, USA
                [2 ]National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO, USA
                [3 ]CUNY Institute for Demographic Research, New York, NY, USA
                [4 ]Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA
                Author notes
                []G. Brooke Anderson, brooke.anderson@ 123456colostate.edu
                Article
                PMC5881935 PMC5881935 5881935 nihpa813874
                10.1007/s10584-016-1779-x
                5881935
                29628541
                8542a942-1f3e-41d9-a8db-50332d4cb9e1
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