Alderman B W, Boyko E J, Loy G L, Jones R H, Keane E M, Daling J R
Department of Preventive Medicine and Biometrics, University of Colorado Medical School, Denver.
Int J Epidemiol. 1988 Sep;17(3):582-8. doi: 10.1093/ije/17.3.582.
The authors performed a population-based case-control study of the association between weather and occurrence of eclampsia in Washington State. Women who were recorded as having eclampsia on Washington birth certificates from 1980 to 1983 were compared to a random sample of all women who gave birth during those years. For each woman studied, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration weather data were used to determine the temperature, relative humidity, precipitation, and wind speed on the date of birth at the station nearest the hospital of birth. Categorical analysis revealed that eclampsia was not associated with low temperature, high relative humidity, precipitation, or high wind speed. These results were unchanged after adjustment for race, parity, maternal age, and late initiation of prenatal care. These results do not support an association between eclampsia and weather on the date of delivery in this population.
作者进行了一项基于人群的病例对照研究,以探讨华盛顿州天气与子痫发生之间的关联。将1980年至1983年华盛顿州出生证明上记录为患有子痫的女性与这些年份所有分娩女性的随机样本进行比较。对于每一位研究对象,利用美国国家海洋和大气管理局的天气数据来确定其出生当日在离出生医院最近的气象站的温度、相对湿度、降水量和风速。分类分析表明,子痫与低温、高相对湿度、降水或高风速无关。在对种族、产次、产妇年龄和产前护理开始较晚进行调整后,这些结果没有变化。这些结果不支持该人群中分娩当日子痫与天气之间存在关联。