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The impact of home energy efficiency interventions and winter fuel payments on winter- and cold-related mortality and morbidity in England: A natural equipment mixed-methods study

Armstrong, Ben; Bonnington, Oliver; Chalabi, Zaid; Davies, Michael; Doyle, Yvonne; Goodwin, James; Green, Judith; Hajat, Shakoor; Hamilton, Ian; Hutchinson, Emma; Mavrogianni, Anna; Milner, James; Milojevic, Ai; Picetti, Roberto; Rehill, Nirandeep; Sarran, Christophe; Shrubsole, Clive; Symonds, Phil; Taylor, Jonathon; Wilkinson, Paul

The impact of home energy efficiency interventions and winter fuel payments on winter- and cold-related mortality and morbidity in England: A natural equipment mixed-methods study Thumbnail


Authors

Ben Armstrong

Oliver Bonnington

Zaid Chalabi

Michael Davies

Yvonne Doyle

James Goodwin

Judith Green

Shakoor Hajat

Ian Hamilton

Emma Hutchinson

Anna Mavrogianni

James Milner

Ai Milojevic

Roberto Picetti

Nirandeep Rehill

Christophe Sarran

Clive Shrubsole

Phil Symonds

Jonathon Taylor

Paul Wilkinson



Abstract

Data sources: The Homes Energy Efficiency Database, mortality and hospital admissions data and weather (temperature) data. Results: There has been a progressive decline in cold-related deaths since the mid-1970s. Since the introduction of WFPs, the gradient of association between winter cold and mortality [2.00%, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.74% to 2.28%] per degree Celsius fall in temperature is somewhat weaker (i.e. that the population is less vulnerable to cold) than in earlier years (2.37%, 95% CI 0.22% to 2.53%). There is also evidence that years with above-average fuel costs were associated with higher vulnerability to outdoor cold. HEE measures installed in England in 2002–10 have had a relatively modest impact in improving the indoor environment. The gains in winter temperatures (around +0.09 °C on a day with maximum outdoor temperature of 5 °C) are associated with an estimated annual reduction of ≈280 cold-related deaths in England (an eventual maximum annual impact of 4000 life-years gained), but these impacts may be appreciably smaller than those of changes in indoor air quality. Modelling studies indicate the potential importance of the medium- and longer-term impacts that HEE measures have on health, which are not observable in short-term studies. They also suggest that HEE improvements of similar annualised cost to current WFPs would achieve greater improvements in health while reducing (rather than increasing) carbon dioxide emissions. In-depth interviews suggest four distinct householder framings of HEE measures (as home improvement, home maintenance, subsidised public goods and contributions to sustainability), which do not dovetail with current ‘consumerist’ national policy and may have implications for the uptake of HEE measures. Limitations: The quantification of intervention impacts in this national study is reliant on various indirect/model-based assessments. Conclusions: Larger-scale changes are required to the housing stock in England if the full potential benefits for improving health and for reaching increasingly important climate change mitigation targets are to be realised. Future work: Studies based on data linkage at individual dwelling level to examine health impacts. There is a need for empirical assessment of HEE interventions on indoor air quality.

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Oct 31, 2018
Publication Date Oct 31, 2018
Deposit Date Sep 12, 2023
Publicly Available Date Sep 14, 2023
Journal Public Health Research
Print ISSN 2050-4381
Electronic ISSN 2050-439X
Publisher NIHR Journals Library
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 6
Issue 11
Pages 1-110
DOI https://doi.org/10.3310/phr06110
Keywords General Engineering
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/11095610
Additional Information Free to read: This content has been made freely available to all.

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