Abstract

Cerebrovascular diseases are the leading cause of mortality in Portugal, especially when related with extreme temperatures. This study highlights the impacts of the exposure-response relationship or lagged effect of low and high temperatures on cerebrovascular mortality, which can be important to reduce the health burden from cerebrovascular diseases. The purpose of this study was to assess the effects of weather on cerebrovascular mortality, measured by ambient temperature in the District of Lisbon, Portugal. A quasi-Poisson generalized additive model combined with a distributed lag non-linear model was applied to estimate the delayed effects of temperature on cerebrovascular mortality up to 30days. With reference to minimum mortality temperature threshold of 22°C, there was a severe risk (RR = 2.09, 95% CI 1.74, 2.51) of mortality for a 30-day-cumulative exposure to extreme cold temperatures of 7.3°C (1st percentile). Similarly, the cumulative effect of a 30-day exposure to an extreme hot temperature of 30°C (99th percentile) was 52% (RR = 1.65, 95% CI 1.37, 1.98) higher than same-day exposure. Over the 13years of study, non-linear effects of temperature on mortality were identified, and the probability of dying from cerebrovascular disease in Lisbon was 7% higher in the winter than in the summer. The findings of this study provide a baseline for future public health prevention programs on weather-related mortality.

Highlights

  • Several epidemiological studies have provided evidence for the association between ambient temperature and mortality rate (Åström et al 2013; Gasparrini et al 2015a)

  • Meteorological data, including ambient temperature measures and dew point were collected from the National Climatic Data Center for the Geofísico Meteorological Station

  • All the analysis was based on generalized additive models (GAM)

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Summary

Introduction

Several epidemiological studies have provided evidence for the association between ambient temperature and mortality rate (Åström et al 2013; Gasparrini et al 2015a). The findings of these studies are similar. When the temperature is below or above a certain critical threshold, mortality gradually increases as the temperature is decreased or increased (Anderson and Bell 2009; Näyhä 2005). Minimum mortality thresholds were reported in other studies in Spain (Näyhä 2005), the USA (Patz et al 2010), and in Russia (Curriero et al 2002)

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