Department of Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard University, MA, USA; Environmental Health Department, Public Health Administration, Ministry of Health, Kuwait.
Department of Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard University, MA, USA; Environmental Health Department, Public Health Administration, Ministry of Health, Kuwait; Department of Health Policy and Management and Risk Sciences and Public Policy Institute, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Environ Res. 2019 Apr;171:278-284. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2019.01.029. Epub 2019 Jan 14.
In light of climate change, health risks are expected to be exacerbated by extreme temperatures. Many studies showed that high and low ambient temperatures are associated with increased short-term mortality risk, but little is known about these risks in Kuwait and the Gulf Region.
To examine the dose-response relationship between 24-h average ambient temperatures and daily mortality risk in Kuwait.
We gathered mortality and meteorological data from 2010 to 2016 in Kuwait. We did a time-series analysis using a negative binomial distribution, and studied the lag effects of temperature with distributed lag non-linear models.
A total of 33,574 all-cause non-accidental deaths were analyzed. The relationship was shown to be non-linear. Overall relative risks of death comparing the 1st percentile (10.9 °C) and the 99th percentile (42.7 °C) to the optimum temperature were 1.67 (1.02-2.73), and 1.65 (1.09-2.48), respectively. Cold effects persisted for 9 days, while the effects of hot temperatures were the highest at lag 0 and only persisted for a week. Adjusting for PM and ozone did not change the temperature-mortality estimates.
Our findings show evidence that there is a statistically significant positive association between temperature extremes and mortality in Kuwait. The evidence has significant implications in assessing climate vulnerability and provides insight into environmental challenges in an inherently hot and arid region.
由于气候变化,预计极端温度会使健康风险恶化。许多研究表明,高温和低温环境与短期死亡率风险增加有关,但在科威特和海湾地区,人们对这些风险知之甚少。
检验科威特 24 小时平均环境温度与每日死亡率风险之间的剂量-反应关系。
我们收集了 2010 年至 2016 年科威特的死亡率和气象数据。我们使用负二项式分布进行时间序列分析,并使用分布式滞后非线性模型研究温度的滞后效应。
共分析了 33574 例全因非意外死亡。结果表明这种关系是非线性的。与最佳温度相比,第 1 百分位(10.9°C)和第 99 百分位(42.7°C)的总体死亡相对风险分别为 1.67(1.02-2.73)和 1.65(1.09-2.48)。寒冷效应持续 9 天,而高温的影响在滞后 0 时最高,仅持续一周。调整 PM 和臭氧后不会改变温度-死亡率的估计值。
我们的研究结果表明,科威特的极端温度与死亡率之间存在统计学上显著的正相关关系。这一证据在评估气候脆弱性方面具有重要意义,并为评估固有炎热干旱地区的环境挑战提供了新的视角。