| Literature DB >> 19758453 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This review examines recent evidence on mortality from elevated ambient temperature for studies published from January 2001 to December 2008.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19758453 PMCID: PMC2759912 DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-8-40
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Recent Studies of High Ambient Temperature and Mortality Examining Air Pollutants as Potential Confounders and/or Effect Modifiers
| Reference | Study location | Method | Exposure | Causes of death | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basu 2008 [ | 9 California counties, May to September 1999-2003 | Time-series and case-crossover | Same day mean apparent temperature; daily mean O3, also PM2.5, PM10, NO2, CO, SO2, lag 0 for PM, lag01 for gases | All-cause mortality | Confounders: none found |
| Bell 2008 [ | Sao Paulo, Brazil, Santiago, Chile and Mexico City, Mexico, 1998-2002 | Case-crossover | Same day apparent temperature compared with days at 75th percentile, same day lag O3, same-day lag PM10 except Santiago lag 1 PM10 | All-cause daily mortality | Confounders: O3, PM10 |
| McMichael 2008 [ | Delhi, Monterrey, Mexico City, Chiang Mai, Bangkok, Salvador, Sao Paulo, Santiago, Cape Town, Ljubljana, Bucharest, Sofia, 2 to 5-year series (1991-1999) | Time-series | Daily maximum threshold (16°C-31°C) temperature, relative humidity, precipitation data, PM10, BS, or TSP | All-cause mortality | Confounders: none found |
| Ren 2008 [ | US 95 NMMAPS counties, June to September 1987-2000 | Time-series | Daily maximum temperature (same-day, lag 1), maximum hourly O3 | CVD mortality | Confounders: not studied |
| Vaneckova 2008a [ | Sydney, Australia, October to March 1993-2001 | Time-series | Temporal Synoptic Index (TSI) on the highest 10% mortality days, O3, PM10 | All-cause, circulatory, cerebrovascular | Confounders: O3 on warm, humid days and PM10 on hot, dry days |
| Vaneckova 2008b [ | Sydney, Australia, October to March 1993-2004 | Time-series | Daily maximum temperature, maximum O3 | Underlying and associated causes of death | Confounders: O3, PM10 |
| Zanobetti and Schwartz 2008 [ | 9 U.S. counties, May to September 1999-2002 | Time series and case-crossover | Daily apparent temperature (minimum, mean, maximum); daily mean O3, PM2.5 | All-cause mortality | Confounders: none found |
| Kolb 2007 [ | Montreal, Canada 1984-1993 | Case-crossover | Mean daily and maximum temperature, barometric pressure, relative humidity, adjusted for O3 and both NO2 and O3 | Daily all-cause mortality | Confounders: none found |
| Medina-Ramon 2007 [ | 50 US cities in cold (November to March) and warm (May to September) seasons | Case-crossover | Binary variable as extreme temperature and continuous; O3 | All-cause and CVD mortality | Confounder: O3 |
| Filleul 2006 [ | 9 French cities, all year and heat wave August 2003 | Time-series | Minimum and maximum temperature, 8-hour maximum O3 | Daily all-cause mortality | Confounders: not studied |
| Ren 2006 [ | Brisbane, Australia (all year January 1996 to December 2001) | Time-series | Minimum temperature, daily PM10 as modifier | Cardiorespiratory mortality | Confounders: not studied |
| Stafoggia 2006 [ | Bologna, Milan, Rome, Turin, 1997-2003 | Case-crossover | 30°C mean apparent temperature (lag01) relative to 20°C, O3 | All-cause mortality | Confounders: none found |
| Basu 2005 [ | 20 US metropolitan areas, seasonal analysis 1992 | Time series (and case-crossover | Mean daily temperature per 10°F adjusted for dew point temperature; daily O3 | Individual and daily cardiorespiratory mortality | Confounders: PM10 in summer |
| O'Neill 2005 [ | Mexico City (1996-98) and Monterrey | Time series; | Heat (35-36°C for Monterrey), mean temperature (25°C Monterrey, 15°C Mexico City), daily O3 | Daily all-cause mortality | Confounders: O3 and PM10 on hot days |
| Rainham and Smoyer-Tomic 2003 [ | Toronto, May 1 to September 30, 1980-1996 | Time-series; relative risk (RR) | Humidex, O3, also CO, NO2, SO2 | Daily all-cause mortality | Confounders: none found |
| Pattenden 2003 [ | Sofia, Bulgaria (1996-1999) and London, England (1993-1996) | Time-series; | Daily weather (2-day mean) and PM (black smoke for London and total suspended particulates for Sofia) | Daily all-cause mortality | Confounders: none found |
Recent Studies Identifying Vulnerable Subgroups of Mortality from High Ambient Temperature
| Reference | Study location | Study design | Exposure | Causes of death | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baccini 2008 [ | 15 European cities, April-September 1990-2000 (5-11 years depending on data availability for city) | Time-series | Maximum apparent temperature (threshold 29.4°C Mediterranean cities and 23.3°C north-continental cities) | Daily all-cause mortality | Respiratory diseases among 75+ years |
| Basu and Ostro 2008 [ | 9 California counties, May to September 1999-2003 | Case-crossover | Mean daily apparent temperature | Cause-specific mortality; all-cause mortality by age, race/ethnicity, gender, education level | Cardiovascular, higher specifically for ischemic heart disease, myocardial infarction, and congestive heart failure, ≤ 1 year, ≤ 5 years, elderly, Black race, out of hospital death; no elevated risks for cerebrovascular, diabetes, respiratory; no difference by gender or high school graduation |
| Bell 2008 [ | Sao Paulo, Brazil, Santiago, Chile and Mexico City, Mexico, 1998-2002 | Case-crossover | Same day apparent temperature | Daily all-cause mortality | 65+ years, women in Mexico City, but men in Santiago and Sao Paulo, less educated in Sao Paulo |
| Ishigami 2008 [ | Budapest, London and Milan, 2003 | Time-series | Mean daily temperature (lag0 and lag1), PM10 (TSP in Budapest), ozone | Daily all-cause mortality | Increased age, females 65+ years greater risk in London and Milan and non-elderly adults in Milan; mortality from external causes, respiratory and cardiovascular diseases |
| Stafoggia 2008 [ | 4 Italian cities, 1997-2004 | Case-crossover | Apparent temperature 30°C compared to 20°C | Deaths in hospitals for those with 2+ days in hospital | Increased age, single general medicine compared to high and intensive care units, history of psychiatric disorders, cerebrovascular diseases, heart failure, stroke, chronic pulmonary diseases |
| Vaneckova 2008a [ | Sydney, Australia, October to March 1993-2001 | Time-series | Temporal Synoptic Index (TSI); ratio of highest 10% mortality days within air mass and % frequency of air mass occurrence | Daily all-cause mortality | 65+ years, women |
| Yip 2008 [ | Maricopa County, Arizona, June to September | Time-series | Heat index | Heat-related deaths | Young and old outdoors, but greater risk for elderly indoors |
| Hajat 2007 [ | England and Wales, | Time-series | Heat (> 95th %) and cold (< 5th %) thresholds | All-cause mortality | Elderly, those in nursing care homes respiratory and external causes, women; not modified by deprivation in London |
| Medina-Ramon 2007 [ | 50 US cities in cold (November to March) and warm (May to September) seasons | Case-crossover | Binary variable as extreme temperature and continuous; ozone | All-cause and CVD mortality | Cities with milder summers, less air conditioning and higher population density |
| Diaz 2006 [ | Madrid, January 1986-December 1997 | Time-series | T(hwave) = Tmax-36.5C if Tmax>36.5C; 5th % to 95th % temperature, NO2 | AR = (RR-1)/RR for daily mortality | Circulatory causes, males 45-64 years |
| Stafoggia 2006 [ | Bologna, Milan, Rome, Turin, 1997-2003 | Case-crossover | 30°C mean apparent temperature (lag01) relative to 20°C; odds ratio | All-cause mortality and previous hospitalization | Increased age and greater for women, widows and widowers, psychiatric disorders, depression, heart and circulatory disorders |
| Hajat 2005 [ | Delhi, Sao Paulo, London, January 1991-December 1994 | Time-series | Daily temperature | Daily all-cause mortality | Respiratory deaths in Sao Paulo and London; children in Delhi |
| O'Neill, Zanobetti and Schwartz 2005 [ | Chicago, Detroit, Minneapolis, Pittsburgh, 1988-1993 for Chicago and 1986-1993 for other cities | Time-series | Percent change daily mean temperature 29°C relative to 15°C (lag0), barometric pressure, day of the week, PM10 | Mortality, prevalence of air conditioner (AC) | Black race, lack of air conditioner |
| Gouveia 2003 [ | Sao Paulo, Brazil, 1991-1994 | Time-series | Daily mean temperature (lag01), SO2, PM10, CO, O3, NO2, day of the week, season, humidity | Daily all-cause mortality, excluding violent deaths, cardiovascular and respiratory mortality | Greatest for 65+years and < 15 years, also increased for15-64 years; elderly cardiovascular, respiratory for adults and elderly; no modification by socioeconomic status |
| O'Neill 2003 [ | 7 US cities, | Time-series | Mean daily apparent temperature (% change 29°C and -5°C), PM10 | Daily all-cause mortality, looking at effect modification by demographics & other variables | Black race, less educated, and outside hospital |
| Rainham and Smoyer-Tomic 2003 [ | Toronto, May 1 to September 30, 1980-1996 | Time-series | Humidex, CO, O3, NO2, SO2 | Daily all-cause mortality | Females |
| Curriero 2002 [ | 11 Eastern US cities, 1973-1994 | Time-series | Daily mean temperature, dew point temperature; minimum mortality temperature (MMT) range: 65.2-90.3 | Daily all-cause mortality, excluding accidents | Higher latitude, more poverty, less air conditioning or heating |
Recent Studies of High Ambient Temperature and All-Cause Daily Mortality*
| Reference | Study population | Method | Exposure | Result: effect estimate (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baccini 2008 [ | 15 European cities, April-September 1990-2000 (5-11 years depending on data availability for city) | Time-series; | Maximum apparent temperature (threshold 29.4°C Mediterranean cities and 23.3°C north-continental cities) | 1°C increase above threshold 3.12 (0.60-5.72) in Mediterranean and 1.84 (0.06-3.64) in north-continental region |
| Basu 2008 [ | 9 California counties, May to September 1999-2003 | Time-series and case-crossover; | Daily apparent temperature (minimum, mean, maximum); daily mean O3, PM2.5, PM10, NO2, CO, SO2 | Per 10°F increase mean temperature, 2.3 (1.0-3.6), similar results for minimum and maximum temperatures |
| Bell 2008 [ | Sao Paulo, Brazil, Santiago, Chile and Mexico City, Mexico, 1998-2002 | Case-crossover; % change | Same day apparent temperature compared with days at 75th percentile, O3, PM10 | 2.69 (-2.06, 7.88) for Santiago, 6.51% (3.57, 9.52) for Sao Paulo and 3.22% (0.93, 5.57) for Mexico City |
| McMichael 2008 [ | Delhi, Monterrey, Mexico City, Chiang Mai, Bangkok, Salvador, Sao Paulo, Santiago, Cape Town, Ljubljana, Bucharest, Sofia, 2 to 5-year series (1991-1999) | Time-series; % change | Daily maximum threshold (16°C-31°C) temperature, relative humidity, precipitation data, PM10, BS, or TSP | 1°C increase above threshold increased death rates with increasing heat in all cities: (ranging from 0.77-18.8) except Chiang Mai 2.39 (-0.49-5.35) and Cape Town 0.47 (-0.31-1.24) |
| Vaneckova 2008a [ | Sydney, Australia, October to March 1993-2001 | Time-series; ratio of highest 10% mortality days within air mass and % frequency of air mass occurrence | Temporal Synoptic Index (TSI) | 1.64 and 2.64 (both significant)for warmest TSIs, no CI provided |
| Zanobetti and Schwartz 2008 [ | 9 U.S. counties, May to September 1999-2002 | Time-series and case-crossover; | Daily apparent temperature (minimum, mean, maximum); daily mean O3, PM2.5, PM10 | Per 10°F increase mean temperature, 1.8 (1.09-2.5) case-crossover and 2.7 (2.0-3.5) time-series; similar results for minimum and maximum temperatures |
| Barnett 2007 [ | 107 U.S cities using data from the National Morbidity and Mortality Study, 1987-2000 | Case-crossover; | Daily temperature | Per 10°F, summer 1987 average increase in cardiovascular deaths was 4.7 (3.0-6.5). By summer 2000, the risk with higher temperature had disappeared (-0.4, -3.2-2.5) |
| Medina-Ramon 2007 [ | 50 US cities in cold (November to March) and warm (May to September) seasons | Case-crossover; | Binary variable as extreme heat (range 22-32°C) | 5.74 (3.38-8.15) for extreme heat |
| Kolb 2007 [ | Montreal, Canada 1984-1993 | Case-crossover; | Mean daily and maximum temperature, barometric pressure, relative humidity, adjusted for O3 and both NO2 and O3 | 1.20 (1.14-1.38) for 25-30°C maximum temperature; strong nonlinear association with a threshold at 25°C |
| Carson 2006 [ | London, England, | Time-series; ratio of winter to non-winter deaths | Daily mean temperature | 1.24 (1.16-1.34) from 1900-10,; 1.54 (1.42, 1.68) from 1927-37, 1.48 (1.35,-1.64) from 1954-64, 1.22 (1.13-1.31) from 1986-96; heat deaths diminished overall in the century |
| Kim 2006 [ | 6 cities in South Korea, summer 1994-2006 | Time-series; | Daily mean temperature thresholds | 1°C above threshold 16.3 (14.2, 18.4), 9.10 (5.12, 13.2), 7.01 (4.42, 9.66), 6.73 (2.47, 11.2) for Seoul, Daegu, Incheon and Gwangiu, respectively |
| Michelozzi 2006 [ | 4 Italian cities, June to September 2003 & 2004 and reference period (Roma, Torino, Milano: 1995-2002 and Bologna: | Time-series; | Daily maximum apparent temperature thresholds (28-32°C) | 1°C above threshold 3.2 (1.9-4.6), 5.0 (3.8-6.1), 5.4 (4.3-6.5), 3.8 (2.5-5.0) for Bologna, Milano, Roma, and Torino, respectively |
| Stafoggia 2006 [ | Bologna, Milan, Rome, Turin, 1997-2003 | Case-crossover; odds ratio | 30°C mean apparent temperature relative to 20°C; odds ratio | 1.34 (1.27, 1.42) |
| Basu 2005 [ | 20 US metropolitan areas, seasonal analysis 1992 | Time series (relative risk) and case-crossover (odds ratio) | Mean daily temperature per 10F adjusted for dew point temperature; daily O3 | Per 10°F, 1.15 (1.07-1.24), 1.10 (0.96-1.27), 1.08 (0.92-1.26), 1.08 (1.02-1.15), and 1.01 (0.92-1.11) in the Southwest, Southeast, Northwest, Northeast, and Midwest, respectively, in the summer from the time-stratified case-crossover |
| El-Zein 2004 [ | Greater Beirut, Lebanon, 1997-1999 | Time-series; | Mean daily temperature, mean daily humidity, minimum mortality temperature (TMM) = 27.5°C | 1°C above TMM 12.3 (5.7, 19.4%) increase in annual mortality |
| Goodman 2004 [ | Dublin, Ireland, April 1980 to December 1996 | Time-series; | Daily minimum temperature, daily mean relative humidity | 1°C increase 0.4 (0.3-0.6) increase |
| Pattenden 2003 [ | Sofia, Bulgaria (1996-1999) and London, England (1993-1996) | Time-series; | Daily mean temperature, relative humidity and PM (black smoke for London and total suspended particulates for Sofia) | 1°C increase above 90th % 1.9 (1.4 to 2.4) in London, and 3.5 (2.2 to 4.8) in Sofia |
| Curriero 2002 [ | 11 Eastern US cities, 1973-1994 | Time-series; | Daily mean temperature, dew point temperature; minimum mortality temperature (MMT) range: 65.2-90.3 | Per 10°F above MMT range 1.4-6.7 |
| Braga 2001 [ | 12 US cities. 1986-1993 | Time-series; | Mean daily temperature, relative humidity | 4% increase (no CI given); |
* Exceptions: El-Zein 2004 and Carson 2006 reported annual and weekly deaths, respectively.