Literature DB >> 25104053

The impact of extremely high temperatures on mortality and mortality cost.

E Roldán1, M Gómez, M R Pino, J Díaz.   

Abstract

The aim of this study was to determine the temperature threshold that triggers an increase in heat-induced mortality in Zaragoza, Spain to determine the impact of extreme heat on mortality and in-hospital cost. A longitudinal ecological study was conducted according to an autoregressive integrated moving average model of a time series for daily deaths and to determine the relative risk of mortality for each degree that the temperature threshold was exceeded. Mortality showed a statistically significant increase when the daily maximum temperature exceeded 38 °C. A Relative Risk was 1.28 with a 95 % confidence interval (95 %CI:1.08-1.57) This threshold temperature didn't change over time. A total of 107 (95 %CI:42-173) heat-attributable deaths were estimated for the period 2002-2006, and the in-hospital estimated cost of these deaths reach € 426,087(95 %CI.€ 167,249-€ 688,907). The articulation of preventive measures to minimize the impact of extreme heat on human health is necessary because of the mortality-temperature relationship.

Entities:  

Keywords:  economic impact; heat waves; temperature; threshold; total mortality

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25104053     DOI: 10.1080/09603123.2014.938028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Environ Health Res        ISSN: 0960-3123            Impact factor:   3.411


  4 in total

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