Mortality related to extreme temperature for 15 cities in northeast Asia
- PMID: 25643105
- DOI: 10.1097/EDE.0000000000000229
Mortality related to extreme temperature for 15 cities in northeast Asia
Abstract
Background: Multisite time-series studies for temperature-related mortality have been conducted mainly in the United States and Europe, but are lacking in Asia. This multisite time-series study examined mortality related to extreme temperatures (both cold and hot) in Northeast Asia, focusing on 15 cities of 3 high-income countries.
Methods: This study includes 3 cities in Taiwan for 1994-2007, 6 cities in Korea for 1992-2010, and 6 cities in Japan for 1972-2009. We used 2-stage Bayesian hierarchical Poisson semiparametric regression to model the nonlinear relationship between temperature and mortality, providing city-specific and country-wide estimates for cold and heat effects. Various exposure time frames, age groups, and causes of death were considered.
Results: Cold effects had longer time lags (5-11 days) than heat effects, which were immediate (1-3 days). Cold effects were larger for cities in Taiwan, whereas heat effects were larger for cities in Korea and Japan. Patterns of increasing effects with age were observed in both cold and heat effects. Both cold and heat effects were larger for cardiorespiratory mortality than for other causes of death. Several city characteristics related to weather or air pollution were associated with both cold and heat effects.
Conclusions: Mortality increased with either cold or hot temperature in urban populations of high-income countries in Northeast Asia, with spatial variations of effects among cities and countries. Findings suggest that climate factors are major contributors to the spatial heterogeneity of effects in this region, although further research is merited to identify other factors as determinants of variability.
Comment in
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Re: Mortality Related to Extreme Temperature for 15 Cities in Northeast Asia.Epidemiology. 2015 Sep;26(5):e62. doi: 10.1097/EDE.0000000000000332. Epidemiology. 2015. PMID: 26075940 No abstract available.
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The Authors Respond.Epidemiology. 2015 Sep;26(5):e63. doi: 10.1097/EDE.0000000000000333. Epidemiology. 2015. PMID: 26075941 No abstract available.
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