Zanobetti Antonella, Schwartz Joel
Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
Epidemiology. 2008 Jul;19(4):563-70. doi: 10.1097/EDE.0b013e31816d652d.
Extreme temperatures have been associated with increased mortality worldwide. The extent to which air pollutants may confound or modify this association remains unclear.
We examined the association between mean apparent temperature and total mortality in 9 cities across the United States during the warm season (May to September) from 1999 to 2002. We applied case-crossover and time-series analyses, adjusting for day of the week and season in time-series analysis. City-specific estimates were then combined using a meta-analysis. A total of 213,438 deaths for all causes occurred in these cities during the study period.
We found that mortality increased with apparent temperature. A 5.5 degrees C (10 degrees F) increase in apparent temperature was associated with an increase in mortality of 1.8% (95% confidence interval = 1.09% to 2.5%) when using case-crossover analysis and with an increase of 2.7% (2.0% to 3.5%) using the time-series analysis.
This study provides evidence of increased mortality due to elevated apparent temperature exposure, with no confounding or effect modification due to air pollution.
极端温度与全球范围内死亡率上升有关。空气污染物在多大程度上可能混淆或改变这种关联尚不清楚。
我们研究了1999年至2002年美国9个城市温暖季节(5月至9月)平均体感温度与总死亡率之间的关联。我们应用了病例交叉分析和时间序列分析,在时间序列分析中对星期几和季节进行了调整。然后使用荟萃分析将特定城市的估计值合并。研究期间这些城市共发生了213438例各种原因导致的死亡。
我们发现死亡率随体感温度升高而增加。使用病例交叉分析时,体感温度升高5.5摄氏度(10华氏度)与死亡率增加1.8%(95%置信区间=1.09%至2.5%)相关,使用时间序列分析时死亡率增加2.7%(2.0%至3.5%)。
本研究提供了证据,表明由于暴露于升高的体感温度导致死亡率增加,且不存在空气污染造成的混淆或效应修正。