4.7 Article

Association between ambient temperature and childhood respiratory hospital visits in Beijing, China: a time-series study (2013-2017)

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 23, Pages 29445-29454

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-12817-w

Keywords

Ambient temperature; Respiratory disease; Air pollution; Outpatient visits; Emergency room visits; Children

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Project [2017YFC0211701, 2016YFC0901103]

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The study found that exposure to low temperature increases the risk of childhood respiratory morbidity, with cold weather having a greater impact on asthma visits. In contrast, the impact of hot weather on respiratory diseases was not significant. Additionally, the study showed that the effect of extreme cold temperature on asthma visits can be enhanced under higher levels of ozone exposure.
Little is known on the potential impact of temperature on respiratory morbidity, especially for children whose respiratory system can be more vulnerable to climate changes. In this time-series study, Poisson generalized additive models combined with distributed lag nonlinear models were used to assess the associations between ambient temperature and childhood respiratory morbidity. The impacts of extreme cold and hot temperatures were calculated as cumulative relative risks (cum.RRs) at the 1st and 99th temperature percentiles relative to the minimum morbidity temperature percentile. Attributable fractions of respiratory morbidity due to cold or heat were calculated for temperatures below or above the minimum morbidity temperature. Effect modifications by air pollution, age, and sex were assessed in stratified analyses. A total of 877,793 respiratory hospital visits of children under 14 years old between 2013 and 2017 were collected from Beijing Children's Hospital. Overall, we observed J-shaped associations with greater respiratory morbidity risks for exposure to lower temperatures, and higher fraction of all-cause respiratory hospital visits was caused by cold (33.1%) than by heat (0.9%). Relative to the minimum morbidity temperature (25 degrees C, except for rhinitis, which is 31 degrees C), the cum.RRs for extreme cold temperature (-6 degrees C) were 2.64 (95%CI: 1.51-4.61) for all-cause respiratory hospital visits, 2.73 (95%CI: 1.44-5.18) for upper respiratory infection, 2.76 (95%CI: 1.56-4.89) for bronchitis, 2.12 (95%CI: 1.30-3.47) for pneumonia, 2.06 (95%CI: 1.27-3.34) for rhinitis, and 4.02 (95%CI: 2.14-7.55) for asthma, whereas the associations between extreme hot temperature (29 degrees C) and respiratory hospital visits were not significant. The impacts of extreme cold temperature on asthma hospital visits were greater at higher levels of ozone (O-3) exposure (> 50th percentile). Our findings suggest significantly increased childhood respiratory morbidity risks at extreme cold temperature, and the impact of extreme cold temperature on asthma hospital visits can be enhanced under higher level exposure to O-3.

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