Dartmouth Events

New Energy Series: Temperature Exposure & Psychiatric Emergencies, Kate Burrows

Dr. Kate Burrows is an environmental health scientist whose research focuses on the relationship between climate- and weather-related extremes and public health.

4/30/2025
12 pm – 1 pm
Online via Zoom
Intended Audience(s): Public
Categories: Arts and Sciences, Lectures & Seminars
Registration required.

Join us online for a New Energy Series talk with Kate Burrows, Assistant Professor, University of Chicago. Dr. Burrows will present on "Hourly Temperature Exposure and Psychiatric Emergencies," moderated by Dr. Sarah Crockett, MD, Geisel School of Medicine.

Register now!

Dr. Burrows has interdisciplinary training in environmental epidemiology (PhD, Yale University School of the Environment) and social-behavioral sciences (MPH, Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health), which allows her to investigate global health issues from a unique perspective that incorporates sociocultural determinants of health and environmental exposures. 

A mixed-methods scientist, Dr. Burrows conducts qualitative and community-based research as well as quantitative research using big data at the national level. Prior to joining the University of Chicago, she was a Voss Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute at Brown University for Environment and Society.

Abstract: The link between elevated ambient temperature and mental health conditions has been increasingly well documented. However, the temporal dynamics of this relationship, including diurnal variation and lag periods, remain poorly understood. This is in part due to a historic lack of highly spatially and temporally refined data. In this time stratified case-crossover study, we investigated the association between hourly temperature exposure and psychiatric emergency department (ED) visits in Massachusetts using data from the Boston Emergency Services Team (2005-2019). Using a new exposure model, ambient temperature was estimated at 1x1km spatial resolution for each individual’s residential location for each of the 24 hours preceding their ED visit. Preliminary results showed non-linear associations between ambient temperature and psychiatric emergencies that increased with longer exposure periods, with 0-24 hours cumulative exposure showing the strongest association compared to 1-hour immediate exposure. Significant diurnal variation was also observed, with the strongest temperature-PES associations for ED visits occurring during morning hours and evening hours, while risk was lower for afternoon and night ED visits. These preliminary results indicate that heat impacts accumulate over the course of a day, which may help elucidate potential causal mechanisms. Findings also suggest the importance of considering temporal patterns when implementing heat-health interventions and provide insights for clinical resource allocation during periods of extreme heat.

 

For more information, contact:
Catherine Homicki

Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.