Added effect of heat wave on mortality in Seoul, Korea

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Standard

Added effect of heat wave on mortality in Seoul, Korea. / Lee, Won Kyung; Lee, Hye Ah; Lim, Youn Hee; Park, Hyesook.

I: International Journal of Biometeorology, Bind 60, Nr. 5, 2016, s. 719-726.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lee, WK, Lee, HA, Lim, YH & Park, H 2016, 'Added effect of heat wave on mortality in Seoul, Korea', International Journal of Biometeorology, bind 60, nr. 5, s. 719-726. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00484-015-1067-x

APA

Lee, W. K., Lee, H. A., Lim, Y. H., & Park, H. (2016). Added effect of heat wave on mortality in Seoul, Korea. International Journal of Biometeorology, 60(5), 719-726. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00484-015-1067-x

Vancouver

Lee WK, Lee HA, Lim YH, Park H. Added effect of heat wave on mortality in Seoul, Korea. International Journal of Biometeorology. 2016;60(5):719-726. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00484-015-1067-x

Author

Lee, Won Kyung ; Lee, Hye Ah ; Lim, Youn Hee ; Park, Hyesook. / Added effect of heat wave on mortality in Seoul, Korea. I: International Journal of Biometeorology. 2016 ; Bind 60, Nr. 5. s. 719-726.

Bibtex

@article{a0a4b02517b54e4fbb852fba5f0d3b07,
title = "Added effect of heat wave on mortality in Seoul, Korea",
abstract = "A heat wave could increase mortality owing to high temperature. However, little is known about the added (duration) effect of heat wave from the prolonged period of high temperature on mortality and different effect sizes depending on the definition of heat waves and models. A distributed lag non-linear model with a quasi-Poisson distribution was used to evaluate the added effect of heat wave on mortality after adjusting for long-term and intra-seasonal trends and apparent temperature. We evaluated the cumulative relative risk of the added wave effect on mortality on lag days 0-30. The models were constructed using nine definitions of heat wave and two relationships (cubic spline and linear threshold model) between temperature and mortality to leave out the high temperature effect. Further, we performed sensitivity analysis to evaluate the changes in the effect of heat wave on mortality according to the different degrees of freedom for time trend and cubic spline of temperature. We found that heat wave had the added effect from the prolonged period of high temperature on mortality and it was considerable in the aspect of cumulative risk because of the lagged influence. When heat wave was defined with a threshold of 98th percentile temperature and ≥2, 3, and 4 consecutive days, mortality increased by 14.8 % (7.5-22.6, 95 % confidence interval (CI)), 18.1 % (10.8-26.0, 95 % CI), 18.1 % (10.7-25.9, 95 % CI), respectively, in cubic spline model. When it came to the definitions of 90th and 95th percentile, the risk increase in mortality declined to 3.7-5.8 % and 8.6-11.3 %, respectively. This effect was robust to the flexibility of the model for temperature and time trend, while the definitions of a heat wave were critical in estimating its relationship with mortality. This finding could help deepen our understanding and quantifying of the relationship between heat wave and mortality and select an appropriate definition of heat wave and temperature model in the future studies.",
keywords = "Cardiovascular Diseases/mortality, Hot Temperature/adverse effects, Humans, Mortality, Nonlinear Dynamics, Respiratory Tract Diseases/mortality, Risk, Seoul",
author = "Lee, {Won Kyung} and Lee, {Hye Ah} and Lim, {Youn Hee} and Hyesook Park",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1007/s00484-015-1067-x",
language = "English",
volume = "60",
pages = "719--726",
journal = "International Journal of Biometeorology",
issn = "0020-7128",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Added effect of heat wave on mortality in Seoul, Korea

AU - Lee, Won Kyung

AU - Lee, Hye Ah

AU - Lim, Youn Hee

AU - Park, Hyesook

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - A heat wave could increase mortality owing to high temperature. However, little is known about the added (duration) effect of heat wave from the prolonged period of high temperature on mortality and different effect sizes depending on the definition of heat waves and models. A distributed lag non-linear model with a quasi-Poisson distribution was used to evaluate the added effect of heat wave on mortality after adjusting for long-term and intra-seasonal trends and apparent temperature. We evaluated the cumulative relative risk of the added wave effect on mortality on lag days 0-30. The models were constructed using nine definitions of heat wave and two relationships (cubic spline and linear threshold model) between temperature and mortality to leave out the high temperature effect. Further, we performed sensitivity analysis to evaluate the changes in the effect of heat wave on mortality according to the different degrees of freedom for time trend and cubic spline of temperature. We found that heat wave had the added effect from the prolonged period of high temperature on mortality and it was considerable in the aspect of cumulative risk because of the lagged influence. When heat wave was defined with a threshold of 98th percentile temperature and ≥2, 3, and 4 consecutive days, mortality increased by 14.8 % (7.5-22.6, 95 % confidence interval (CI)), 18.1 % (10.8-26.0, 95 % CI), 18.1 % (10.7-25.9, 95 % CI), respectively, in cubic spline model. When it came to the definitions of 90th and 95th percentile, the risk increase in mortality declined to 3.7-5.8 % and 8.6-11.3 %, respectively. This effect was robust to the flexibility of the model for temperature and time trend, while the definitions of a heat wave were critical in estimating its relationship with mortality. This finding could help deepen our understanding and quantifying of the relationship between heat wave and mortality and select an appropriate definition of heat wave and temperature model in the future studies.

AB - A heat wave could increase mortality owing to high temperature. However, little is known about the added (duration) effect of heat wave from the prolonged period of high temperature on mortality and different effect sizes depending on the definition of heat waves and models. A distributed lag non-linear model with a quasi-Poisson distribution was used to evaluate the added effect of heat wave on mortality after adjusting for long-term and intra-seasonal trends and apparent temperature. We evaluated the cumulative relative risk of the added wave effect on mortality on lag days 0-30. The models were constructed using nine definitions of heat wave and two relationships (cubic spline and linear threshold model) between temperature and mortality to leave out the high temperature effect. Further, we performed sensitivity analysis to evaluate the changes in the effect of heat wave on mortality according to the different degrees of freedom for time trend and cubic spline of temperature. We found that heat wave had the added effect from the prolonged period of high temperature on mortality and it was considerable in the aspect of cumulative risk because of the lagged influence. When heat wave was defined with a threshold of 98th percentile temperature and ≥2, 3, and 4 consecutive days, mortality increased by 14.8 % (7.5-22.6, 95 % confidence interval (CI)), 18.1 % (10.8-26.0, 95 % CI), 18.1 % (10.7-25.9, 95 % CI), respectively, in cubic spline model. When it came to the definitions of 90th and 95th percentile, the risk increase in mortality declined to 3.7-5.8 % and 8.6-11.3 %, respectively. This effect was robust to the flexibility of the model for temperature and time trend, while the definitions of a heat wave were critical in estimating its relationship with mortality. This finding could help deepen our understanding and quantifying of the relationship between heat wave and mortality and select an appropriate definition of heat wave and temperature model in the future studies.

KW - Cardiovascular Diseases/mortality

KW - Hot Temperature/adverse effects

KW - Humans

KW - Mortality

KW - Nonlinear Dynamics

KW - Respiratory Tract Diseases/mortality

KW - Risk

KW - Seoul

U2 - 10.1007/s00484-015-1067-x

DO - 10.1007/s00484-015-1067-x

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 26428482

VL - 60

SP - 719

EP - 726

JO - International Journal of Biometeorology

JF - International Journal of Biometeorology

SN - 0020-7128

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 230069989