On the estimation of heat-intensity and heat-duration effects in time series models of temperature-related mortality in Stockholm, Sweden

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>We examine the effect of heat waves on mortality, over and above what would be predicted on the basis of temperature alone.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Present modeling approaches may not fully capture extra effects...

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Main Authors: Rocklov Joacim, Barnett Adrian G, Woodward Alistair
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012-04-01
Series:Environmental Health
Online Access:http://www.ehjournal.net/content/11/1/23
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spelling doaj-faeb1dee85794eb4b134b0a97e7ae2682020-11-24T23:56:30ZengBMCEnvironmental Health1476-069X2012-04-011112310.1186/1476-069X-11-23On the estimation of heat-intensity and heat-duration effects in time series models of temperature-related mortality in Stockholm, SwedenRocklov JoacimBarnett Adrian GWoodward Alistair<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>We examine the effect of heat waves on mortality, over and above what would be predicted on the basis of temperature alone.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Present modeling approaches may not fully capture extra effects relating to heat wave duration, possibly because the mechanisms of action and the population at risk are different under more extreme conditions. Modeling such extra effects can be achieved using the commonly left-out effect-modification between the lags of temperature in distributed lag models.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Using data from Stockholm, Sweden, and a variety of modeling approaches, we found that heat wave effects amount to a stable and statistically significant 8.1-11.6% increase in excess deaths per heat wave day. The effects explicitly relating to heat wave duration (2.0–3.9% excess deaths per day) were more sensitive to the degrees of freedom allowed for in the overall temperature-mortality relationship. However, allowing for a very large number of degrees of freedom indicated over-fitting the overall temperature-mortality relationship.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Modeling additional heat wave effects, e.g. between lag effect-modification, can give a better description of the effects from extreme temperatures, particularly in the non-elderly population. We speculate that it is biologically plausible to differentiate effects from heat and heat wave duration.</p> http://www.ehjournal.net/content/11/1/23
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rocklov Joacim
Barnett Adrian G
Woodward Alistair
spellingShingle Rocklov Joacim
Barnett Adrian G
Woodward Alistair
On the estimation of heat-intensity and heat-duration effects in time series models of temperature-related mortality in Stockholm, Sweden
Environmental Health
author_facet Rocklov Joacim
Barnett Adrian G
Woodward Alistair
author_sort Rocklov Joacim
title On the estimation of heat-intensity and heat-duration effects in time series models of temperature-related mortality in Stockholm, Sweden
title_short On the estimation of heat-intensity and heat-duration effects in time series models of temperature-related mortality in Stockholm, Sweden
title_full On the estimation of heat-intensity and heat-duration effects in time series models of temperature-related mortality in Stockholm, Sweden
title_fullStr On the estimation of heat-intensity and heat-duration effects in time series models of temperature-related mortality in Stockholm, Sweden
title_full_unstemmed On the estimation of heat-intensity and heat-duration effects in time series models of temperature-related mortality in Stockholm, Sweden
title_sort on the estimation of heat-intensity and heat-duration effects in time series models of temperature-related mortality in stockholm, sweden
publisher BMC
series Environmental Health
issn 1476-069X
publishDate 2012-04-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>We examine the effect of heat waves on mortality, over and above what would be predicted on the basis of temperature alone.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Present modeling approaches may not fully capture extra effects relating to heat wave duration, possibly because the mechanisms of action and the population at risk are different under more extreme conditions. Modeling such extra effects can be achieved using the commonly left-out effect-modification between the lags of temperature in distributed lag models.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Using data from Stockholm, Sweden, and a variety of modeling approaches, we found that heat wave effects amount to a stable and statistically significant 8.1-11.6% increase in excess deaths per heat wave day. The effects explicitly relating to heat wave duration (2.0–3.9% excess deaths per day) were more sensitive to the degrees of freedom allowed for in the overall temperature-mortality relationship. However, allowing for a very large number of degrees of freedom indicated over-fitting the overall temperature-mortality relationship.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Modeling additional heat wave effects, e.g. between lag effect-modification, can give a better description of the effects from extreme temperatures, particularly in the non-elderly population. We speculate that it is biologically plausible to differentiate effects from heat and heat wave duration.</p>
url http://www.ehjournal.net/content/11/1/23
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AT barnettadriang ontheestimationofheatintensityandheatdurationeffectsintimeseriesmodelsoftemperaturerelatedmortalityinstockholmsweden
AT woodwardalistair ontheestimationofheatintensityandheatdurationeffectsintimeseriesmodelsoftemperaturerelatedmortalityinstockholmsweden
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