Division of Biostatistics, School of Public Health and Primary Care, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, Hong Kong.
Environ Health. 2013 Jul 19;12:59. doi: 10.1186/1476-069X-12-59.
Numerous studies have found associations between extreme temperatures and human mortality but relatively few studies have been done in sub-tropical and tropical cities, especially in Asia. In this study we examine the impact of cold temperatures, cold waves and other meteorological and environmental variables on cool season mortality in 2 subtropical Asian cities.
Separate analysis of daily mortality time-series from Hong Kong and Taipei using Generalized Additive Models with natural mortality as the outcome daily mean temperature as the main explanatory variable and relative humidity, solar radiation, wind speed, pollutants (nitrogen dioxide (NO(2)), sulfur dioxide (SO(2)), respirable suspended particulates (PM(10)), ozone (O(3)), seasonality and day of the week controlled as potential confounders. Lags up to 35 days were considered for temperature, and distributed lag models were used to determine the number of lags for final models. Subgroup analyses were also done by gender, age group, cause of death and geographical area of residence.
Cold temperatures were strongly associated with higher mortality with lagged effects persisting up to 3 weeks in Hong Kong and 2 weeks in Taipei. Cold effects were much stronger for deaths among older people and non-cancer deaths. Prolonged cold spells modestly but significantly raised mortality after accounting for the effects of individual cold days. Higher daily ozone levels were also strongly associated with higher short-term mortality in Taipei and Hong Kong, while relative humidity and solar radiation were weakly and inconsistently associated with mortality.
Cold temperatures and cold spells substantially increase short-term mortality in sub-tropical Asian cities particularly among the elderly. Greater attention needs to be paid to the adverse health effects of cold temperatures. Interventions including provisions of shelters, cold weather warnings and education about the possible health effects of cold temperature should be carried out in sub-tropical areas.
大量研究发现极端温度与人类死亡率之间存在关联,但在亚热带和热带城市,尤其是在亚洲,开展的相关研究相对较少。本研究旨在探讨寒冷天气、寒潮及其它气象和环境变量对两个亚热带亚洲城市凉爽季节死亡率的影响。
使用广义加性模型,以自然死亡率为因变量、日平均温度为主要解释变量、相对湿度、太阳辐射、风速、污染物(二氧化氮 (NO(2))、二氧化硫 (SO(2))、可吸入悬浮颗粒物 (PM(10))、臭氧 (O(3)))、季节和星期几为潜在混杂因素,分别对香港和台北的每日死亡率时间序列进行分析。考虑到温度的滞后效应,最长可达 35 天,并使用分布滞后模型确定最终模型的滞后天数。还按性别、年龄组、死因和居住地地理区域进行了亚组分析。
寒冷天气与死亡率升高显著相关,在香港滞后效应可持续 3 周,在台北可持续 2 周。寒冷天气对老年人和非癌症死亡的影响更为显著。在考虑到个别寒冷天气日的影响后,长时间的严寒天气适度但显著增加了死亡率。较高的日臭氧水平与台北和香港的短期死亡率升高显著相关,而相对湿度和太阳辐射与死亡率的相关性较弱且不一致。
寒冷天气和寒潮会显著增加亚热带亚洲城市的短期死亡率,尤其是在老年人中。需要更加关注寒冷天气对健康的不利影响。在亚热带地区,应采取包括提供避难所、发布寒冷天气警报和教育公众寒冷天气可能对健康造成的影响等干预措施。