| Literature DB >> 28011366 |
Harry F Lee1, Jie Fei2, Christopher Y S Chan3, Qing Pei4, Xin Jia5, Ricci P H Yue3.
Abstract
This study seeks to provide further insight regarding the relationship of climate-epidemics in Chinese history through a multi-scalar analysis. Based on 5961 epidemic incidents in China during 1370-1909 CE we applied Ordinary Least Square regression and panel data regression to verify the climate-epidemic nexus over a range of spatial scales (country, macro region, and province). Results show that epidemic outbreaks were negatively correlated with the temperature in historical China at various geographic levels, while a stark reduction in the correlational strength was observed at lower geographic levels. Furthermore, cooling drove up epidemic outbreaks in northern and central China, where population pressure reached a clear threshold for amplifying the vulnerability of epidemic outbreaks to climate change. Our findings help to illustrate the modifiable areal unit and the uncertain geographic context problems in climate-epidemics research. Researchers need to consider the scale effect in the course of statistical analyses, which are currently predominantly conducted on a national/single scale; and also the importance of how the study area is delineated, an issue which is rarely discussed in the climate-epidemics literature. Future research may leverage our results and provide a cross-analysis with those derived from spatial analysis.Keywords: China; Climate change; Epidemics; Multi-scalar analysis; Spatial scales; Temperature
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28011366 DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.12.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Sci Med ISSN: 0277-9536 Impact factor: 4.634