Comparison of Temperature-Mortality Associations Across the Middle East Using Different Exposure Estimation Approaches.

IF 10.1 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Yazan Alwadi,Barrak Alahmad,Marc G Weisskopf,Petros Koutrakis
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

BACKGROUND Traditional temperature-health studies have predominantly relied on temperature measurements from stations or modelled spatial averages from gridded temperature datasets. It has been suggested that population-weighted spatial averages would perform better in remote regions with large temperature and population variability. This would be particularly true in regions other than North America and Europe where outcome data is often only available on a crude spatial scale, but no studies have examined this in such regions, where temperatures can be particularly hot. OBJECTIVE Using the Middle East as a climate hotspot, our objective was to illustrate the utility of population weighting temperature exposures in understudied regions with large health data aggregation areas. METHODS We used a daily 1km × 1km temperature dataset for 152 administrative regions in 12 Middle Eastern countries. From 2003 to 2020, for each administrative region, we computed daily minimum and maximum population-weighted and unweighted spatial average temperatures. To illustrate, we examined temperature-mortality associations in two countries: Kuwait and Jordan. We used distributed lag non-linear models to estimate the daily timeseries temperature-mortality associations in using three temperature exposure measurement approaches: station temperatures, unweighted spatial averages, and population-weighted temperatures. For each scenario, we fitted country-specific optimized parameters and compared them using three metrics: 1) exposure-response relationships, 2) minimum mortality temperatures and 3) attributable mortality estimates. RESULTS The study region had geographically sporadic yet densely populated areas within each country. In both Kuwait and Jordan, population-weighted and unweighted spatial average temperatures resulted in fairly similar exposure-response curves, whereas both were notably different from station temperatures. Minimum mortality temperatures were 30.2, 28.6, and 28.3°C in Kuwait for station, unweighted spatial average, and population-weighted temperatures, respectively. In Jordan, the corresponding temperatures were 20.6, 20.9, and 20°C. Heat attributable mortality calculated using population-weighted temperatures increased by 15% compared to the traditionally used station temperatures in Kuwait and Jordan, respectively, and -0.4% and 5% compared to unweighted spatial average temperatures. DISCUSSION Spatial averaging, whether weighted or unweighted, is a valuable tool for estimating heat-attributable mortality. This is especially true in regions like the Middle East, where granular temperature data are often unavailable and health studies are urgently needed. Population-weighted temperatures may better capture localized exposures in areas with significant population clustering, though their exact added effect on top of unweighted spatial averages remains a tentative conclusion.. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP16010.
使用不同暴露估计方法比较中东地区温度与死亡率的关系。
传统的温度健康研究主要依赖于站点的温度测量或网格化温度数据集的模拟空间平均值。研究表明,在温度和人口变化较大的偏远地区,人口加权空间平均值表现较好。在北美和欧洲以外的地区尤其如此,这些地区的结果数据通常只能在粗略的空间尺度上获得,但没有研究在这些温度可能特别高的地区对此进行过检查。目的:利用中东作为气候热点,我们的目标是说明人口加权温度暴露在具有大量健康数据聚集区域的未充分研究地区的效用。方法采用12个中东国家152个行政区域的每日1km × 1km温度数据集。2003 - 2020年,计算了各行政区人口加权和非加权的日最小和最大空间平均气温。为了说明这一点,我们研究了两个国家的温度与死亡率的关系:科威特和约旦。我们使用分布滞后非线性模型估算了三种温度暴露测量方法的日时间序列温度-死亡率关系:站点温度、未加权空间平均值和人口加权温度。对于每种情况,我们拟合了针对特定国家的优化参数,并使用三个指标进行比较:1)暴露-反应关系,2)最低死亡温度和3)归因死亡率估计。结果研究区域在地理上是零星的,但在每个国家内人口密集。在科威特和约旦,人口加权和未加权的空间平均温度导致了相当相似的暴露-响应曲线,而两者都与站点温度有显著差异。科威特站、未加权空间平均和人口加权温度的最低死亡温度分别为30.2、28.6和28.3°C。在约旦,相应的温度分别为20.6、20.9和20°C。与科威特和约旦的传统站点温度相比,使用人口加权温度计算的热归因死亡率分别增加了15%,与未加权的空间平均温度相比,分别增加了0.4%和5%。空间平均,无论是加权的还是未加权的,都是估算热归因死亡率的一个有价值的工具。在中东等地区尤其如此,这些地区往往无法获得详细的温度数据,迫切需要进行健康研究。人口加权温度可以更好地捕捉人口聚集地区的局部暴露,尽管它们对未加权空间平均值的确切附加效应仍然是一个暂定的结论。https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP16010。
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来源期刊
Environmental Health Perspectives
Environmental Health Perspectives 环境科学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
14.40
自引率
2.90%
发文量
388
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Environmental Health Perspectives (EHP) is a monthly peer-reviewed journal supported by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, part of the National Institutes of Health under the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Its mission is to facilitate discussions on the connections between the environment and human health by publishing top-notch research and news. EHP ranks third in Public, Environmental, and Occupational Health, fourth in Toxicology, and fifth in Environmental Sciences.
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