Impact of improved insulation and heating on mortality risk of older cohort members with prior cardiovascular or respiratory hospitalisations

BMJ Open. 2017 Nov 14;7(11):e018079. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-018079.

Abstract

Objectives: We carried out an evaluation of a large-scale New Zealand retrofit programme using administrative data that provided the statistical power to assess the effect of insulation and/or heating retrofits on cardiovascular and respiratory-related mortality in people aged 65 and over with prior respiratory or circulatory hospitalisations.

Design: Quasi-experimental cohort study based on administrative data.

Setting: New Zealand.

Participants: From a larger study cohort of over 900 000 people, we selected two subcohorts: 3287 people who were aged 65 and over and had experienced pretreatment period cardiovascular-related hospitalisation (ICD-10 chapter 9), and 1561 people aged 65 and over who had experienced pretreatment respiratory-related hospitalisation (ICD-10 chapter 10).

Interventions: Treatment group individuals lived in a home that received insulation and/or heating retrofits under the Warm Up New Zealand: Heat Smart programme. Control group individuals lived in a home that was matched to a treatment home based on physical characteristics and location.

Primary and secondary outcome measures: HR for all-cause mortality for treatment with insulation, heating, or insulation and heating relative to control group.

Results: People with pretreatment circulatory hospitalisation who occupied a household that received only insulation had an HR for all-cause mortality of 0.673 (95% CI 0.535 to 0.847) (p<0.001) relative to control group members. Individuals with a pretreatment respiratory hospitalisation who occupied a household that received only an insulation retrofit had an HR for all-cause mortality of 0.830 (95% CI 0.655 to 1.051) (p=0.122) relative to control group members. There was no evidence of an additional benefit from receiving heating.

Conclusions: We interpret the hazard rate observed for cardiovascular subcohort individuals who received insulation as evidence of a protective effect, reducing the risk of mortality for vulnerable older adults. There is suggestive evidence of a protective effect of insulation for the respiratory subcohort.

Keywords: epidemiology; evaluation; health economics; housing; insulation; public health.

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Cardiovascular Diseases / mortality*
  • Cohort Studies
  • Construction Materials*
  • Environment, Controlled
  • Female
  • Heating / instrumentation*
  • Hospitalization / statistics & numerical data
  • Housing
  • Humans
  • Kaplan-Meier Estimate
  • Male
  • New Zealand / epidemiology
  • Protective Factors
  • Respiratory Tract Diseases / mortality*
  • Risk Factors