Background: Climate change disproportionately affects rural populations, yet Australian climate-health research focuses overwhelmingly on metropolitan cities. Whether rural and metropolitan areas experience climate-health impacts through different mechanistic pathways is unknown. Methods: We conducted an ecological time-series study linking daily climate data from the SILO database (2010-2023) to hospitalisation data across 15 Local Health Districts in New South Wales: annual diagnosis-specific rates (9 conditions) and quarterly total and mental health episodes (64 quarters). Rural-metropolitan stratified XGBoost models using climate-only features identified divergent predictors. Black Summer bushfire impacts were quantified using interrupted time series and cumulative Forest Fire Danger Index dose-response models. Sensitivity analyses included leave-one-out cross-validation, placebo tests, outlier exclusion, and positive/negative disease controls. Findings: Climate-only models explained substantially more variance in rural hospitalisation rates (R²=0.54-0.63 for chronic kidney disease, mental health, and potentially preventable hospitalisations) than in metropolitan areas (R² near zero). Rainfall and humidity dominated rural predictions (permutation importance 0.56 and 0.33); maximum temperature dominated metropolitan predictions. During Black Summer, interrupted time series identified +1,623 excess episodes per fire-affected district per quarter (p<0.001) and +61.7 excess mental health episodes (p<0.001), with mental health effects delayed by one quarter (p=0.029). Condition-specific dose-response showed positive associations for pneumonia (p=0.035), COPD (p=0.060), and CHD (p=0.093); diabetes was correctly null (p=0.65). The temperature-mental health relationship was significantly strengthening over time (p<0.001). Interpretation: Rural and metropolitan populations experience climate-health impacts through fundamentally different pathways. Rural communities are primarily affected by drought and humidity deficits — variables absent from current heatwave-focused response frameworks. Drought-health early warning systems for rural Australia are needed.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Hayden Farquhar
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Hayden Farquhar (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69df2c2fe4eeef8a2a6b1355 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19553046
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: