Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, Drexel Dornsife School of Public Health, Philadelphia, USA; Urban Health Collaborative, Drexel Dornsife School of Public Health, Philadelphia, USA.
Institute of Transportation Studies, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Environ Int. 2023 Oct;180:108230. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2023.108230. Epub 2023 Sep 25.
Green vegetation may protect against heat-related death by improving thermal comfort. Few studies have investigated associations of green vegetation with heat-related mortality in Latin America or whether associations are modified by the spatial configuration of green vegetation. We used data from 323 Latin American cities and meta-regression models to estimate associations between city-level greenness, quantified using population-weighted normalized difference vegetation index values and modeled as three-level categorical terms, and excess deaths from heat (heat excess death fractions [heat EDFs]). Models were adjusted for city-level fine particulate matter concentration (PM), social environment, and country group. In addition to estimating overall associations, we derived estimates of association stratified by green space clustering by including an interaction term between a green space clustering measure (dichotomized at the median of the distribution) and the three-level greenness variable. We stratified analyses by climate zone (arid vs. temperate and tropical combined). Among the 79 arid climate zone cities, those with moderate and high greenness levels had modestly lower heat EDFs compared to cities with the lowest greenness, although protective associations were more substantial in cities with moderate versus high greenness levels and confidence intervals (CI) crossed the null (Beta: -0.41, 95% CI: -1.06, 0.25; Beta -0.23, 95% CI: -0.95, 0.49, respectively). In 244 non-arid climate zone cities, associations were approximately null. We did not observe evidence of effect modification by green space clustering. Our results suggest that greenness may offer modest protection against heat-related mortality in arid climate zone Latin American cities.
绿色植被可能通过改善热舒适度来预防与热有关的死亡。很少有研究调查拉丁美洲绿色植被与与热有关的死亡率之间的关联,也没有研究这些关联是否因绿色植被的空间配置而改变。我们使用了来自 323 个拉丁美洲城市的数据和元回归模型,来估计城市层面的绿化程度(使用人口加权归一化差异植被指数值量化,并表示为三水平分类变量)与因热导致的超额死亡(过热死亡分数[过热 EDF])之间的关联。模型调整了城市层面的细颗粒物浓度(PM)、社会环境和国家组别。除了估计总体关联外,我们还通过包括一个绿色空间聚类度量(在分布中位数处二分)与三水平绿化变量之间的交互项,得出了按绿色空间聚类分层的关联估计值。我们根据气候带(干旱与温带和热带相结合)进行了分层分析。在 79 个干旱气候带城市中,与绿化程度最低的城市相比,绿化程度处于中、高水平的城市的过热 EDF 略低,但在绿化程度中等的城市与绿化程度较高的城市相比,保护关联更为显著,置信区间(CI)越过了零(Beta:-0.41,95%CI:-1.06,0.25;Beta:-0.23,95%CI:-0.95,0.49)。在 244 个非干旱气候带城市中,关联几乎为零。我们没有发现绿色空间聚类的效应修饰的证据。我们的结果表明,在干旱气候带的拉丁美洲城市中,绿化程度可能对与热有关的死亡率提供适度的保护。