Geographical Variations of the Minimum Mortality Temperature at a Global Scale: A Multicountry Study.

Aurelio Tobías ; Masahiro Hashizume ; Yasushi Honda ; Francesco Sera ORCID logo ; Chris Fook Sheng Ng ; Yoonhee Kim ; Dominic Roye ; Yeonseung Chung ; Tran Ngoc Dang ; Ho Kim ; +57 more... Whanhee Lee ; Carmen Íñiguez ; Ana Vicedo-Cabrera ; Rosana Abrutzky ; Yuming Guo ; Shilu Tong ; Micheline de Sousa Zanotti Stagliorio Coelho ; Paulo Hilario Nascimento Saldiva ; Eric Lavigne ; Patricia Matus Correa ; Nicolás Valdés Ortega ; Haidong Kan ; Samuel Osorio ; Jan Kyselý ; Aleš Urban ; Hans Orru ; Ene Indermitte ; Jouni JK Jaakkola ; Niilo RI Ryti ; Mathilde Pascal ; Veronika Huber ; Alexandra Schneider ; Klea Katsouyanni ; Antonis Analitis ; Alireza Entezari ; Fatemeh Mayvaneh ; Patrick Goodman ; Ariana Zeka ; Paola Michelozzi ; Francesca de'Donato ; Barrak Alahmad ; Magali Hurtado Diaz ; César De la Cruz Valencia ; Ala Overcenco ; Danny Houthuijs ; Caroline Ameling ; Shilpa Rao ; Francesco Di Ruscio ; Gabriel Carrasco ; Xerxes Seposo ; Baltazar Nunes ; Joana Madureira ; Iulian-Horia Holobaca ; Noah Scovronick ; Fiorella Acquaotta ; Bertil Forsberg ; Christofer Åström ; Martina S Ragettli ; Yue-Liang Leon Guo ; Bing-Yu Chen ; Shanshan Li ; Valentina Colistro ; Antonella Zanobetti ; Joel Schwartz ; Do Van Dung ; Ben Armstrong ORCID logo ; Antonio Gasparrini ORCID logo ; (2021) Geographical Variations of the Minimum Mortality Temperature at a Global Scale: A Multicountry Study. Environmental Epidemiology, 5 (5). e169-. DOI: 10.1097/EE9.0000000000000169
Copy

BACKGROUND: Minimum mortality temperature (MMT) is an important indicator to assess the temperature-mortality association, indicating long-term adaptation to local climate. Limited evidence about the geographical variability of the MMT is available at a global scale. METHODS: We collected data from 658 communities in 43 countries under different climates. We estimated temperature-mortality associations to derive the MMT for each community using Poisson regression with distributed lag nonlinear models. We investigated the variation in MMT by climatic zone using a mixed-effects meta-analysis and explored the association with climatic and socioeconomic indicators. RESULTS: The geographical distribution of MMTs varied considerably by country between 14.2 and 31.1 °C decreasing by latitude. For climatic zones, the MMTs increased from alpine (13.0 °C) to continental (19.3 °C), temperate (21.7 °C), arid (24.5 °C), and tropical (26.5 °C). The MMT percentiles (MMTPs) corresponding to the MMTs decreased from temperate (79.5th) to continental (75.4th), arid (68.0th), tropical (58.5th), and alpine (41.4th). The MMTs indreased by 0.8 °C for a 1 °C rise in a community's annual mean temperature, and by 1 °C for a 1 °C rise in its SD. While the MMTP decreased by 0.3 centile points for a 1 °C rise in a community's annual mean temperature and by 1.3 for a 1 °C rise in its SD. CONCLUSIONS: The geographical distribution of the MMTs and MMTPs is driven mainly by the mean annual temperature, which seems to be a valuable indicator of overall adaptation across populations. Our results suggest that populations have adapted to the average temperature, although there is still more room for adaptation.


picture_as_pdf
Tobias_etal_2021-Geographical-Variations-of-the-Minimum-Mortality.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL Data Cite XML EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads