Abstract

Much is known about the adverse health impact of high and low temperatures. The Spatial Synoptic Classification is a useful tool for assessing weather effects on health because it considers the combined effect of meteorological factors rather than temperature only. The aim of this study was to assess the association between oppressive weather types and daily total mortality in Sweden. Time-series Poisson regression with distributed lags was used to assess the relationship between oppressive weather (Dry Polar, Dry Tropical, Moist Polar, and Moist Tropical) and daily deaths over 14 days in the extended summer (May to September), and 28 days during the extended winter (November to March), from 1991 to 2014. Days not classified as oppressive weather served as the reference category. We computed relative risks with 95% confidence intervals, adjusting for trends and seasonality. Results of the southern (Skåne and Stockholm) and northern (Jämtland and Västerbotten) locations were pooled using meta-analysis for regional-level estimates. Analyses were performed using the dlnm and mvmeta packages in R. During summer, in the South, the Moist Tropical and Dry Tropical weather types increased the mortality at lag 0 through lag 3 and lag 6, respectively. Moist Polar weather was associated with mortality at longer lags. In the North, Dry Tropical weather increased the mortality at shorter lags. During winter, in the South, Dry Polar and Moist Polar weather increased mortality from lag 6 to lag 10 and from lag 19 to lag 26, respectively. No effect of oppressive weather was found in the North. The effect of oppressive weather types in Sweden varies across seasons and regions. In the North, a small study sample reduces precision of estimates, while in the South, the effect of oppressive weather types is more evident in both seasons.

Highlights

  • There are numerous studies that have evaluated the negative impact of extreme ambient temperature on human health [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • The hot weather types (DT and Moist Tropical (MT)) in summer were associated with an immediate increase in all-cause mortality in southern locations (Skåne and Stockholm) that remained significant for several days, and the cumulative effect over 14 days was significant for both hot weather types

  • Our results showed a significant increase of mortality at longer lags during winter associated with

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Summary

Introduction

There are numerous studies that have evaluated the negative impact of extreme ambient temperature on human health [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Research has used temperature itself as a predictor variable, as well as one of a number of apparent temperature metrics that accounts for other ambient meteorological factors, such as humidity and wind speed [7,8]. Mortality is the most common evaluated health outcome. It has been shown that heat exacerbates numerous chronic health problems; typically either all-cause mortality or a range of broad causes such as cardiovascular or respiratory disease are studied [7]. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 1696; doi:10.3390/ijerph16101696 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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