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Temperature frequency and mortality: Assessing adaptation to local temperature

Title
Temperature frequency and mortality: Assessing adaptation to local temperature
Authors
Magali HurtadoDiazRagettliMartina S.HashizumeMasahiroPascalMathildede Sousa Zanotti Stagliorio CoelhoMichelineOrtegaNicolás ValdésRytiNiiloScovronickNoahMichelozziPaolaCorreaPatricia MatusGoodmanPatrickNascimento SaldivaPaulo HilarioRazRaananAbrutzkyRosanaOsorioSamuelPanShih-ChunRaoShilpaTongShiluAchilleosSouzanaDangTran NgocColistroValentinaHuberVeronikaWhanheeSeposoLeeXerxesHondaYasushiYoonheeYue LeonWuYaoWenBoForsbergBertilÍñiguezCarmenAmelingCarolinela Cruz ValenciaCésar DeHouthuijsDannyVan DungDoRoyeDominicIndermitteEneMayvanehFatemehAcquaottaFiorellade'DonatoFrancescaCarrasco-EscobarGabrielKanHaidongCarlsenHanne KrageOrruHansKimHoHolobacaIulian-HoriaKyselýJanMadureiraJoanaSchwartzJoelJaakkolaJouni J.K.KatsouyanniKleaGasparriniAntonioArmstrongBenSeraFrancescoLavigneEricLiShanshanGuoYumingOvercencoAlaUrbanAlešSchneiderAlexandraEntezariAlirezaVicedo-CabreraAna MariaZanobettiAntonellaAnalitisAntonisZekaArianaTobiasAurelioNunesBaltazarAlahmadBarrak
Ewha Authors
이환희
SCOPUS Author ID
이환희scopus
Issue Date
2024
Journal Title
Environment International
ISSN
1604-4120JCR Link
Citation
Environment International vol. 187
Keywords
AdaptationClimate changeFrequencyMortalityTemperature
Indexed
SCOPUS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Assessing the association between temperature frequency and mortality can provide insights into human adaptation to local ambient temperatures. We collected daily time-series data on mortality and temperature from 757 locations in 47 countries/regions during 1979–2020. We used a two-stage time series design to assess the association between temperature frequency and all-cause mortality. The results were pooled at the national, regional, and global levels. We observed a consistent decrease in the risk of mortality as the normalized frequency of temperature increases across the globe. The average increase in mortality risk comparing the 10th to 100th percentile of normalized frequency was 13.03% (95% CI: 12.17–13.91), with substantial regional differences (from 4.56% in Australia and New Zealand to 33.06% in South Europe). The highest increase in mortality was observed for high-income countries (13.58%, 95% CI: 12.56–14.61), followed by lower-middle-income countries (12.34%, 95% CI: 9.27–15.51). This study observed a declining risk of mortality associated with higher temperature frequency. Our findings suggest that populations can adapt to their local climate with frequent exposure, with the adapting ability varying geographically due to differences in climatic and socioeconomic characteristics. © 2024
DOI
10.1016/j.envint.2024.108691
Appears in Collections:
의과대학 > 의학과 > Journal papers
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