4.2 Article

Effect of air temperature on human births, preterm births and births associated with maternal hypertension

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERNAL-FETAL & NEONATAL MEDICINE
Volume 35, Issue 25, Pages 6663-6669

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14767058.2021.1919075

Keywords

Heat waves; global warming; hypertensive disease; prematurity

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The study found significant correlations between outdoor air temperature and the number of daily births, preterm birth rate, and births associated with hypertension. Increasing temperatures lead to higher rates of births and preterm births, with a stronger delayed effect observed on births associated with hypertension, warranting further investigation.
Objective We studied potential effects of outdoor air temperatures or barometric pressure on births, preterm births and births associated with maternal hypertension. Methods 12,269 births were retrospectively reviewed in Brussel and 25,880 in South Reunion Island. National Belgium and French weather reference centers provided outdoor air temperatures and barometric pressures from the nearest weather stations on the corresponding birthdays. Poisson regression models were used to assess if outdoor air temperatures or barometric pressure could be correlated, immediately and several days later, with the number of daily births, preterm births and births associated with hypertension. Results Outdoor air temperature was significantly correlated to the number of daily births in Brussels. For each additional degree Celsius, overall births increased by 0.4% during the same day. Four days later, overall births increased by 1.8%, preterm births by 2.6% and births associated with hypertension by 5.7%. Similar observations on numbers of daily births were reported in South Reunion Island, without reaching statistical significance (p = .08). Conclusion As previously demonstrated in recent studies, increased air temperature leads progressively to higher rates of births and preterm births. An even stronger delayed effect of air temperature was observed on births associated with hypertension. This would be worth further investigating.

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