Background: Epidemiologic studies show that high temperatures are related to mortality, but little is known about the exposureresponse function and the lagged effect of heat. We report the associations between daily maximum apparent temperature and daily deaths during the warm season in 15 European cities. Methods: The city-specific analyses were based on generalized estimating equations and the city-specific results were combined in a Bayesian random effects meta-analysis. We specified distributed lag models in studying the delayed effect of exposure. Time-varying coefficient models were used to check the assumption of a constant heat effect over the warm season. Results: The city-specific exposure-response functions have a V shape, with a change-point that varied among cities. The meta-analytic estimate of the threshold was 29.4°C for Mediterranean cities and 23.3°C for north-continental cities. The estimated overall change in all natural mortality associated with a 1°C increase in maximum apparent temperature above the city-specific threshold was 3.12% (95% credibility interval = 0.60% to 5.72%) in the Mediterranean region and 1.84% (0.06% to 3.64%) in the north-continental region. Stronger associations were found between heat and mortality from respiratory diseases, and with mortality in the elderly. Conclusions: There is an important mortality effect of heat across Europe. The effect is evident from June through August; it is limited to the first week following temperature excess, with evidence of mortality displacement. There is some suggestion of a higher effect of early season exposures. Acclimatization and individual susceptibility need further investigation as possible explanations for the observed heterogeneity among cities.

Heat effects on mortality in 15 European cities / M. BACCINI; A. BIGGERI; G. ACCETTA; T. KOSATSKY; K. KATSOUYANNI; A. ANALITIS; HR. ANDERSON; L. BISANTI; J. DANOVA; D. D'IPPOLITI; B. FORSBERG; S. MEDINA; A. PALDY; D. RABCZENKO; C. SCHINDLER; P. MICHELOZZI. - In: EPIDEMIOLOGY. - ISSN 1044-3983. - STAMPA. - 19:(2008), pp. 711-719.

Heat effects on mortality in 15 European cities.

BACCINI, MICHELA;BIGGERI, ANNIBALE;
2008

Abstract

Background: Epidemiologic studies show that high temperatures are related to mortality, but little is known about the exposureresponse function and the lagged effect of heat. We report the associations between daily maximum apparent temperature and daily deaths during the warm season in 15 European cities. Methods: The city-specific analyses were based on generalized estimating equations and the city-specific results were combined in a Bayesian random effects meta-analysis. We specified distributed lag models in studying the delayed effect of exposure. Time-varying coefficient models were used to check the assumption of a constant heat effect over the warm season. Results: The city-specific exposure-response functions have a V shape, with a change-point that varied among cities. The meta-analytic estimate of the threshold was 29.4°C for Mediterranean cities and 23.3°C for north-continental cities. The estimated overall change in all natural mortality associated with a 1°C increase in maximum apparent temperature above the city-specific threshold was 3.12% (95% credibility interval = 0.60% to 5.72%) in the Mediterranean region and 1.84% (0.06% to 3.64%) in the north-continental region. Stronger associations were found between heat and mortality from respiratory diseases, and with mortality in the elderly. Conclusions: There is an important mortality effect of heat across Europe. The effect is evident from June through August; it is limited to the first week following temperature excess, with evidence of mortality displacement. There is some suggestion of a higher effect of early season exposures. Acclimatization and individual susceptibility need further investigation as possible explanations for the observed heterogeneity among cities.
2008
19
711
719
M. BACCINI; A. BIGGERI; G. ACCETTA; T. KOSATSKY; K. KATSOUYANNI; A. ANALITIS; HR. ANDERSON; L. BISANTI; J. DANOVA; D. D'IPPOLITI; B. FORSBERG; S. MEDINA; A. PALDY; D. RABCZENKO; C. SCHINDLER; P. MICHELOZZI
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Baccini_2008_heat.pdf

Accesso chiuso

Tipologia: Versione finale referata (Postprint, Accepted manuscript)
Licenza: Tutti i diritti riservati
Dimensione 1.18 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
1.18 MB Adobe PDF   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/250155
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 644
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 600
social impact