Department of Occupational and Environmental Health Sciences, Peking University School of Public Health, 38 Xueyuan Road, Haidian District, Beijing 100191, China.
Peking University School of Nursing, 38 Xueyuan Road, Haidian District, Beijing 100191, China.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Apr 28;18(9):4675. doi: 10.3390/ijerph18094675.
(1) Background: The health effect of temperature has become a rising public health topic. The objective of this study is to assess the association between apparent temperature and non-accidental deaths, and the mortality burden attributed to cold and heat temperature; (2) Methods: The daily data on temperature and deaths were collected from 10 cities in Thailand, Korea and China. We fitted a time-series regression with a distributed lag nonlinear model (DLNM) to derive the health risk of temperature for each city and then pooled them to get the overall cumulative risk by multivariate meta-analysis. Additionally, we calculated the attributable fraction of deaths for heat and cold, which was defined as temperatures above and below minimum-mortality temperature (MMT); (3) Results: There are regional heterogeneities in the minimum mortality percentiles (MMP) and attributable fractions for different countries. The MMP varied from about the 5-10th percentile in Thailand to 63-93rd percentile in China and Korea. The attributable fractions of the total deaths due to short-term exposure to temperature in Asia is 7.62%, of which the cold effect (6.44%) is much higher than the heat effect (1.18%); (4) Conclusions: Our study suggested that apparent temperature was associated with an increase in non-accidental mortality. Most of the temperature-related mortality burden was attributable to cold, except for Thailand.
(1) 背景:温度对健康的影响已成为一个日益受到关注的公共卫生议题。本研究旨在评估体感温度与非意外死亡之间的关系,以及冷、热温度对死亡率的影响;(2) 方法:本研究从泰国、韩国和中国的 10 个城市收集了每日温度和死亡数据。我们采用分布滞后非线性模型(DLNM)拟合时间序列回归,以评估每个城市的温度健康风险,然后通过多元荟萃分析对总体累积风险进行汇总;(3) 结果:不同国家的最小死亡率百分位数(MMP)和归因分数存在区域异质性。MMP 在中国和韩国的范围为 5-10%,而在泰国的范围为 63-93%。亚洲因短期暴露于温度而导致的总死亡归因分数为 7.62%,其中冷效应(6.44%)远高于热效应(1.18%);(4) 结论:本研究表明,体感温度与非意外死亡率的增加有关。除泰国外,大部分与温度相关的死亡率负担归因于冷效应。