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Citation
Tags
HERO ID
98716
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Characterizing temperature and mortality in nine California counties
Author(s)
Basu, R; Feng, WY; Ostro, BD
Year
2008
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Journal
Epidemiology
ISSN:
1044-3983
EISSN:
1531-5487
Volume
19
Issue
1
Page Numbers
138-45
Language
English
PMID
18091422
DOI
10.1097/EDE.0b013e31815c1da7
Web of Science Id
WOS:000251889400021
Abstract
Background: Elevated temperature has been associated with increased mortality. Few epidemiologic studies, however, have considered air pollutants as potential confounders or effect modifiers. None has focused on California, where the climate is generally mild and pollution levels tend to be high-an ideal setting to examine the independent effect of temperature from air pollution. Methods: We examined the association between mean daily apparent temperature and nonaccidental mortality in 9 counties throughout California from May to September 1999-2003. Data were obtained from the National Climatic Data Center (temperature and relative humidity), the California Department of Health Services (mortality), and the California Air Resources Board (particulate matter, ozone, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen dioxide). We conducted a time-stratified case-crossover study, with a time-series analysis as a sensitivity analysis, adjusting for day of the week using both methods and adjusting for time trend in the time-series analysis. We first obtained county-specific estimates and then combined them using meta-analytic methods. Results: A total of 248,019 deaths were included. Each 10° (Fahrenheit) increase in same-day mean apparent temperature corresponded to a 2.3% increase in mortality (95% confidence interval = 1.0%-3.6%) in the case-crossover analysis for all 9 counties combined, with nearly identical results produced from the time-series analysis. No air pollutant examined was found to be a significant confounder or effect modifier. Conclusions: Even without extremes in apparent temperature, we observed an association between temperature and mortality in California that was independent of air pollution.
Tags
NAAQS
•
ISA-NOx (2016)
Considered
•
ISA-Ozone (2013 Final Project Page)
Considered
Health Effects
•
ISA-PM (2009 Final Project Page)
2009 Final
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