Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Health Sciences, Wuhan University, 185 Donghu Road, Wuchang District, Wuhan 430071, China.
Global Health Institute, Wuhan University, 8 Donghunan Road, Wuchang District, Wuhan 430072, China.
Sci Rep. 2017 Mar 22;7:45093. doi: 10.1038/srep45093.
We examined the impact of extreme temperatures on mortality in 12 counties across Hubei Province, central China, during 2009-2012. Quasi-Poisson generalized linear regression combined with distributed lag non-linear model was first applied to estimate county-specific relationship between temperature and mortality. A multivariable meta-analysis was then used to pool the estimates of county-specific mortality effects of extreme cold temperature (1st percentile) and hot temperature (99th percentile). An inverse J-shaped relationship was observed between temperature and mortality at the provincial level. Heat effect occurred immediately and persisted for 2-3 days, whereas cold effect was 1-2 days delayed and much longer lasting. Higher mortality risks were observed among females, the elderly aged over 75 years, persons dying outside the hospital and those with high education attainment, especially for cold effects. Our data revealed some slight differences in heat- and cold- related mortality effects on urban and rural residents. These findings may have important implications for developing locally-based preventive and intervention strategies to reduce temperature-related mortality, especially for those susceptible subpopulations. Also, urbanization should be considered as a potential influence factor when evaluating temperature-mortality association in future researches.
我们研究了 2009 年至 2012 年期间中国中部湖北省 12 个县极端温度对死亡率的影响。首先应用拟泊松广义线性回归结合分布滞后非线性模型来估计温度与死亡率之间的县特异性关系。然后进行多变量荟萃分析,以汇总极端低温(第 1 百分位数)和高温(第 99 百分位数)对县特异性死亡率影响的估计值。在省级水平上观察到温度与死亡率之间呈反 J 形关系。热效应立即发生,并持续 2-3 天,而冷效应延迟 1-2 天,持续时间更长。女性、75 岁以上的老年人、医院外死亡的人和受教育程度较高的人死亡率更高,尤其是在冷效应方面。我们的数据显示,城乡居民的热相关和冷相关死亡率效应存在一些细微差异。这些发现对于制定基于当地的预防和干预策略以降低与温度相关的死亡率可能具有重要意义,特别是对于那些易感人群。此外,在未来的研究中评估温度-死亡率相关性时,应考虑城市化作为一个潜在的影响因素。