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Journal Article

Citation

Xiao J, Peng J, Zhang Y, Liu T, Rutherford S, Lin H, Qian Z, Huang C, Luo Y, Zeng W, Chu C, Ma W. Int. J. Biometeorol. 2014; 59(3): 365-372.

Affiliation

Guangdong Provincial Institute of Public Health, Guangdong Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 160#, Qunxian Road, Panyu District, Guangzhou, 511430, China.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, International Society of Biometeorology, Publisher Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s00484-014-0848-y

PMID

24880926

Abstract

Although several studies have documented that latitude might be an effect modifier of the association between temperature and mortality, little is known about how much latitude modifies the temperature-mortality relationship. In this study, we examined this research question using a distributed lag non-linear model and meta-regression analysis based on data from 13 large cities of eastern US from the US National Morbidity, Mortality, and Air Pollution Study. We found that cold effects lasted about 1 month while hot effects were acute and short-term. Meta-regression analysis showed that latitude modified both the cold and hot effects with statistical significance. The cold effect decreased with the latitude increment, with -0.11 % change of mortality effect for 1° increment, while the hot effect increased with the latitude increment, with 0.18 % change of mortality effect for 1° increment. This finding indicates the importance of latitude on temperature-related mortality risk, which is helpful for city to develop localized effective adaptation strategy in the context of climate change.


Language: en

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