Search
Search
Participating agencies:   ASPR   |  CDC   |  EPA   |  FEMA   |  NIOSH   |  NOAA   |  OSHA   |  SAMHSA   

NIHHIS News

SuperUser Account
/ Categories: NIHHIS, General News

First Regional NIHHIS Rio Grande/Bravo Workshop in El Paso, TX

On Wednesday, July 13th, the National Integrated Heat Health Information System (NIHHIS) held its first regional workshop in El Paso, Texas to understand the heat-health needs and unique adaptive approaches of the Rio Grande/Bravo region.

The workshop was opened by Nicole Ferrini, Chief Resilience Officer of El Paso, and lead by Gregg Garfin of CLIMAS (the Southwest NOAA Regional Integrated Science and Assessments [RISA] program), but also included participants from emergency management, public health, research institutions, design and construction, and NGOs.

The area is no stranger to extremes, and has developed interventions including an extreme weather task force, preparing promotoras (lay Hispanic/Latino community members who receive specialized training to provide basic health education in the community) to reach vulnerable populations. The area also has attracted investment through the Rockefeller 100 Resilient Cities initiative in both Ciudad Juárez, Mexico and El Paso.

The workshop was funded in part by CPO, and CPO’s Hunter Jones and Juli Trtanj were on the planning committee and spoke about the the NIHHIS framing for the workshop. The interdisciplinary set of participants was engaged in plenary and breakouts to understand the existing interventions and capacity, information and research needs, and to set an agenda for resilience to extreme heat going forward.

Local news outlets also featured the workshop, which was open to all local heat health practitioners, and conducted interviews with several of the participants. A workshop report and subsequent work stream meetings on the key NIHHIS components are forthcoming.

The Rio Grande/Bravo region is one of several initial foci for NIHHIS, which is conducting these regional engagements to understand how the heat-health needs may be similar or different, and which is building a broad network of practitioners interested in addressing the mounting problem of extreme heat.

 

Print
3535
 

x
National Geographic highlights NOAA-funded Urban Heat Island project with 2019 campaign set to kick off Saturday 24 July 2019

National Geographic highlights NOAA-funded Urban Heat Island project with 2019 campaign set to kick off Saturday

Developing an Early Warning System to Prevent Heat Illness

As three cities gear up to map urban heat islands on Saturday, this week National Geographic shared an article highlighting the NOAA-funded 2018 summer mapping campaign to help address extreme heat. The article includes the project’s map of Washington, DC, in August 2018 where temperatures spanned almost 17 degrees between the hottest and coolest areas of the city.

RCCC Heatwave Guide for Cities 24 July 2019

RCCC Heatwave Guide for Cities

This guide is intended to help city governments understand the heat risks they face, develop an early-warning system, work with partners to consolidate action plans, and adapt urban-planning practices.

Citizen Scientists Take to the Streets to Map the Hottest Places in Ten U.S. Cities 24 July 2019

Citizen Scientists Take to the Streets to Map the Hottest Places in Ten U.S. Cities

Citizen scientists will take to the streets during the hottest days this summer to map hot spots in ten different U.S. cities. The campaign is part of a NOAA-funded project to map places where buildings, asphalt, and other parts of urban environments can amplify high temperatures, putting people at heightened risk of heat illness during extreme heat events.

June 2019 was hottest on record for the globe 18 July 2019

June 2019 was hottest on record for the globe

Antarctic sea ice coverage shrank to new record low

Schools are letting out, Memorial Day is nearly here, and for many Americans that means the unofficial start of summer. And if it's summer, then it 's time to start paying attention to the risk of extreme heat. According to NOAA’s summer outlook, most of the United States is favored to have a hotter than average summer in 2017. Only in the Great Plains do forecasters think the chances for a cool or a normal summer are equal to the chances of a hot summer. Everywhere else—from Alaska to southern California, and from Maine to Texas—odds are tilted toward well above average warmth. The absolute highest chances for a much warmer than usual summer are in Hawaii. (see the large version of the map below for Hawaii and Alaska.

Extreme heat tweet chat to take place during widespread heatwave 17 July 2019

Extreme heat tweet chat to take place during widespread heatwave

With a major heatwave ahead this weekend, NOAA Climate.gov will host an extreme heat tweet chat this Friday, July 19, from noon to 1 pm Eastern. Four heat health experts will answer questions about how extreme heat is changing, the impacts extreme heat has on people, and how communities are working together to make themselves more climate resilient.

RSS
First567891011121314Last

Events

«October 2021»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930
Urban Heat Island Community of Practice Webinar Series continues with "Green Cooling Infrastructure"

Urban Heat Island Community of Practice Webinar Series continues with "Green Cooling Infrastructure"

The National Integrated Heat Health Information System (NIHHIS) and its partners are hosting a webinar series to feature case studies on what happens after communities conduct their urban heat island mapping campaigns. On September 30th at 3PM EDT, the fifth of the series, "Green Cooling Infrastructure" will take place and will feature communities that have implemented solutions to obtain heat resilience through green infrastructure. The session will highlight case studies from Philadelphia and Pawtucket and explore how they were able to implement green infrastructure, and by doing so, strengthen community cohesion and resilience. The intersection with environmental justice, public health, crime reduction, and equitable approaches to improvements that benefit residents will be threaded throughout the webinar.

Register and learn more

Read more
123
45678910
1112
Urban Heat Island Community of Practice Webinar Series Continues with "Community Engagement, Outreach, and Education"

Urban Heat Island Community of Practice Webinar Series Continues with "Community Engagement, Outreach, and Education"

The National Integrated Heat Health Information System (NIHHIS) and its partners are hosting a webinar series to feature community case studies on what happens after Urban Heat Island mapping campaigns are conducted. The sixth of the series, "Investigate Options 4- Community Engagement, Outreach, Education", will take place on October 12th at 4:00 PM EDT and will feature municipalities that have effectively engaged communities, institutions, politicians, and the press to advance heat mitigation efforts. The session will feature three municipality managers from Austin, Cincinnati, and King County, WA, who will explore how they engage in collaborative approaches to urban heat planning, and identify ways that may be helpful for your climate outreach efforts. 

Register and learn more. 

Read more
1314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
1234567

Upcoming events iCalendar export

 


 

NIHHIS is made possible by our participating agencies.

ASPR


CDC


EPA

FEMA


NIOSH


NOAA

OSHA


SAMHSA

 

NIHHIS Headquarters

Address: 1315 East-West Hwy, Suite 1100
Silver Spring, MD 20910

About Us

NIHHIS is an integrated information system that builds understanding of the problem of extreme heat, defines demand for climate services that enhance societal resilience, develops science-based products and services from a sustained climate science research program, and improves capacity, communication, and societal understanding of the problem in order to reduce morbidity and mortality due to extreme heat.  NIHHIS is a jointly developed system by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Back To Top