4.2 Article

Ambient Temperature and Years of Life Lost: A National Study in China

期刊

INNOVATION
卷 2, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.xinn.2020.100072

关键词

TEMPERATURE; YEARS OF LIFE LOST; MORTALITY BURDEN; DISTRIBUTED LAG NONLINEAR MODEL; MULTIVARIATE META-ANALYSIS; CHINA

资金

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFA0606200]
  2. Guangzhou Science and Technology Project [201704020194]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study found a U-shaped association between temperatures and YLL, with an average of 1.02 YLL per death attributed to temperature. Cold temperatures caused 0.98 YLL per death, with the majority coming from moderate cold. YLL was higher in individuals with cardiovascular diseases, males, younger age groups, and in central China.
Although numerous studies have investigated premature deaths attributable to temperature, effects of temperature on years of life lost (YLL) remain unclear. We estimated the relationship between temperatures and YLL, and quantified the YLL per death caused by temperature in China. We collected daily meteorological and mortality data, and calculated the daily YLL values for 364 locations (2013-2017 in Yunnan, Guangdong, Hunan, Zhejiang, and Jilin provinces, and 2006-2011 in other locations) in China. A time-series design with a distributed lag nonlinear model was first employed to estimate the location-specific associations between temperature and YLL rates (YLL/100,000 population), and a multivariate meta-analysis model was used to pool location-specific associations. Then, YLL per death caused by temperatures was calculated. The temperature and YLL rates consistently showed U-shaped associations. A mean of 1.02 (95% confidence interval: 0.67, 1.37) YLL per death was attributable to temperature. Cold temperature caused 0.98 YLL per death with most from moderate cold (0.84). The mean YLL per death was higher in those with cardiovascular diseases (1.14), males (1.15), younger age categories (1.31 in people aged 65-74 years), and in central China (1.34) than in those with respiratory diseases (0.47), females (0.87), older people (0.85 in people >= 75 years old), and northern China (0.64) or southern China (1.19). The mortality burden was modified by annual temperature and temperature variability, relative humidity, latitude, longitude, altitude, education attainment, and central heating use. Temperatures caused substantial YLL per death in China, which was modified by demographic and regional characteristics.

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