美国 120 个大城市地区高温对老年人呼吸道住院治疗的影响。

Cassandra R O'Lenick, Stephanie E Cleland, Lucas M Neas, Mallory W Turner, E Melissa Mcinroe, K Lloyd Hill, Andrew J Ghio, Meghan E Rebuli, Ilona Jaspers, Ana G Rappold
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引用次数: 0

摘要

理由:众所周知,极端高温是导致老年人死亡的原因之一。然而,人们对美国各城市和各人口亚群的高温暴露对呼吸系统发病率的影响还不甚了解:在全美范围内开展一项研究,以确定 2000-2017 年间高温对居住在美国 120 个最大城市的老年人(65 岁以上)呼吸系统疾病住院率的影响:方法:根据邮政编码级日平均气温和热指数的变化,对呼吸系统住院病人的日住院率进行研究。对于每个城市,我们使用时间分层条件准泊松回归与分布式滞后非线性模型估计了暖季高温(6 月至 9 月)与特定病因呼吸道住院率之间的累积关联(滞后天数为 0-6 天)。我们使用多元元回归估算了全国范围内的相关性,并通过最佳线性无偏预测更新了特定城市的相关性。通过分层模型,我们探讨了年龄、性别和种族(黑人/白人)的效应修正。结果以高温(第 95 百分位数)下住院人数与各结果、人口组别和城市地区的中位数温度相比的百分比变化进行报告:我们确定了 2000 年至 2017 年间美国 120 个大城市的 3,275,033 名医疗保险受益人的呼吸道住院情况。在全国范围内,高温下 7 天的累积关联导致全因呼吸道疾病主要诊断住院率增加 1.2% (0.4%, 2.0%),主要原因是呼吸道感染[1.8% (0.6%, 3.0%)]和慢性呼吸道疾病/呼吸衰竭[1.2% (0.0%, 2.4%)]的增加。如果用热指数而不是温度来定义暴露程度,则会观察到更强的关联性。在 120 个城市中,我们观察到与高温有关的呼吸道住院相对风险存在相当大的地域差异,而且我们观察到在年龄最大的受益人(85 岁以上)和居住在南大西洋城市的黑人受益人中,与高温有关的呼吸道住院负担过重。在 18 年的研究期间,估计有 11,710 例因高温暴露而导致的呼吸道住院治疗:结论:研究结果表明,高温高湿会导致老年人呼吸道感染和慢性肺部疾病加重。与高温有关的住院率的地域差异表明,环境因素在很大程度上造成了不成比例的负担,应在多城市研究中进一步调查地区层面的影响因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impact of Heat on Respiratory Hospitalizations among Older Adults in 120 Large US Urban Areas.

Rationale: Extreme heat exposure is a well-known cause of mortality among older adults. However, the impacts of exposure on respiratory morbidity across US cities and population subgroups is not well understood.

Objectives: A nationwide study to determine the impact of high heat on respiratory disease hospitalizations among older adults (65+) living in the 120 largest US cities between 2000-2017.

Methods: Daily rates of inpatient respiratory hospitalizations were examined with respect to variations in ZIP-code-level daily mean temperature and heat index. For each city, we estimated cumulative associations (lag-days 0-6) between warm-season heat (June-September) and cause-specific respiratory hospitalizations using time-stratified conditional quasi-Poisson regression with distributed lag non-linear models. We estimated nationwide associations using multivariate meta-regression and updated city-specific associations via best linear unbiased prediction. With stratified models, we explored effect modification by age, sex, and race (Black/white). Results were reported as percent change in hospitalizations at high temperatures (95th percentile) compared to median temperatures for each outcome, demographic group, and metropolitan area.

Results: We identified 3,275,033 respiratory hospitalizations among Medicare beneficiaries across 120 large US cites between 2000 and 2017. Nationwide, 7-day cumulative associations at high temperatures, resulted in a 1.2% (0.4%, 2.0%) increase in hospitalizations for primary diagnoses of all-cause respiratory disease, primarily driven by increases in respiratory tract infections [1.8% (0.6%, 3.0%)], and chronic respiratory diseases/respiratory failure [1.2% (0.0%, 2.4%)]. Stronger associations were observed when exposure was defined using the heat index instead of temperature. Across the 120 cities, we observed considerable geographic variation in the relative risk of heat-related respiratory hospitalizations, and we observed disproportionate burdens of heat-related respiratory hospitalizations among the oldest beneficiaries (85+ years), and among Black beneficiaries living in South Atlantic cities. During the 18-year study period, there were an estimated 11,710 excess respiratory hospitalizations due to heat exposure.

Conclusions: Results suggest that high temperature and humidity contribute to exacerbation of respiratory tract infections and chronic lung diseases among older adults. Geographic variation in heat-related hospitalization rates suggests that contextual factors largely account for disproportionate burdens, and area-level influences should be further investigated in multi-city studies. This article is open access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives License 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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