| Literature DB >> 33962633 |
Nikita Thomas1, Stefanie T Ebelt2, Andrew J Newman3, Noah Scovronick2, Rohan R D'Souza1, Shannon E Moss1, Joshua L Warren4, Matthew J Strickland5, Lyndsey A Darrow5, Howard H Chang6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ambient temperature observations from single monitoring stations (usually located at the major international airport serving a city) are routinely used to estimate heat exposures in epidemiologic studies. This method of exposure assessment does not account for potential spatial variability in ambient temperature. In environmental health research, there is increasing interest in utilizing spatially-resolved exposure estimates to minimize exposure measurement error.Entities:
Keywords: Daymet; Emergency department visits; Exposure assessment; Health effect; Temperature
Year: 2021 PMID: 33962633 PMCID: PMC8106140 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-021-00735-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Mean (standard deviation) in °C of daily maximum (TMX), mean (AVG) and minimum (TMN) temperature during May to October by study city for four exposure metrics: airport observations, simple average of Daymet 1 km data, and Daymet population-weighted averages (PWA) using county or ZIP code population
| City | Exposure | Airport Obs. | Daymet Average | Daymet County PWA | Daymet ZCTA PWA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Atlanta | TMX | 28.2 (4.6) | 28.6 (4.4) | 28.6 (4.3) | 28.7 (4.4) |
| AVG | 22.5 (4.3) | 22.8 (4.4) | 22.6 (4.3) | 23.4 (4.4) | |
| TMN | 16.6 (4.8) | 18.6 (4.6) | 16.6 (4.8) | 16.5 (4.8) | |
| Los Angeles | TMX | 23.1 (3.3) | 27.5 (4.1) | 28.0 (4.3) | 24.6 (3.5) |
| AVG | 21.7 (3.5) | 20.5 (2.7) | 21.7 (3.8) | 19.9 (2.5) | |
| TMN | 15.1 (3.3) | 16.6 (2.2) | 16.0 (2.6) | 15.4 (3.1) | |
| Phoenix | TMX | 37.9 (4.9) | 37.3 (4.7) | 36.0 (4.5) | 37.8 (4.7) |
| AVG | 28.1 (4.6) | 30.1 (4.7) | 28.7 (4.6) | 31.5 (4.7) | |
| TMN | 21.0 (5.0) | 25.0 (4.9) | 22.1 (5.0) | 20.3 (4.9) | |
| Salt Lake City | TMX | 27.5 (7.4) | 25.5 (6.8) | 23.1 (6.6) | 27.4 (7.1) |
| AVG | 15.8 (5.8) | 20.3 (6.3) | 17.5 (6.0) | 20.5 (6.6) | |
| TMN | 10.8 (5.5) | 13.5 (6.2) | 11.9 (5.6) | 8.5 (5.3) | |
| San Francisco | TMX | 21.7 (3.7) | 23.4 (3.8) | 23.9 (3.9) | 21.1 (3.3) |
| AVG | 18.0 (2.8) | 16.6 (2.2) | 18.5 (3.0) | 17.2 (2.5) | |
| TMN | 12.4 (2.2) | 12.8 (1.9) | 12.3 (2.0) | 12.0 (2.1) |
Total counts of emergency department visits during May to October in five US cities. Daily average counts are provided in parentheses
| Atlanta 1993–2012 | Los Angeles 2005–2016 | Phoenix 2008–2016 | San Francisco 2005–2016 | Salt Lake City 2005–2016 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fluid and electrolyte imbalance | 593,202 (162) | 1,447,202 (655) | 321,448 (194) | 548,596 (248) | 108,112 (49) |
| Acute renal injury | 131,444 (36) | 392,949 (179) | 70,735 (8) | 139,685 (63) | 17,035 (8) |
| Circulatory diseases | 2,289,447 (622) | 4,637,289 (2100) | 875,401 (529) | 1,909,559 (865) | 229,422 (104) |
| Respiratory diseases | 1,971,681 (536) | 3,130,345 (1418) | 715,187 (432) | 1,315,687 (596) | 193,141 (87) |
| Gastrointestinal infections | 54,712 (15) | 95,024 (43) | 17,151 (10) | 37,574 (17) | 8406 (4) |
| Heat-related illness | 12,332 (3) | 9484 (4) | 5986 (4) | 3081 (1) | 685 (0) |
Fig. 1Relative risks (RR) of daily emergency department visits associated with same-day minimum temperature between the 95th and the 50th percentile, comparing four different exposure assessment methods: airport observations (○), Daymet average (◼), Daymet county-level population-weighted average (●), and Daymet ZCTA population-weighted average (▲). The y-axis ranges are different across outcomes
Fig. 2Relative risks (RR) of daily emergency department visits associated with same-day maximum temperature (Max) between the 95th and the 50th percentile, comparing four different exposure assessment methods: airport observation (○), average of Daymet data (◼), county-level population-weighted average (●), and ZIP code-level population-weighted average (▲). The y-axis ranges are different across outcomes
Fig. 3Exposure-response functions and 95% pointwise confidence intervals for warm-season daily minimum temperature and same-day emergency department visits for fluid and electrolyte imbalance and acute kidney injury, comparing two different exposure assessment methods: airport observations and Daymet ZCTA population-weighted average (PWA). Reference level for the relative risk (RR) is the median observed temperature value for each exposure metric