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  Cornell University

MAE Publications and Papers

Sibley School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering

New article: Effects of Extreme Temperatures on Cause-Specific Cardiovascular Mortality in China

Article:  Wang, XY; Li, GX; Liu, LQ; Westerdahl, D; Jin, XB; Pan, XC; (2015)  “Effects of Extreme Temperatures on Cause-Specific Cardiovascular Mortality in China”, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 12 (12): 16136-16156

DOI

Abstract:  Objective: Limited evidence is available for the effects of extreme temperatures on cause-specific cardiovascular mortality in China.
Methods: We collected data from Beijing and Shanghai, China, during 2007-2009, including the daily mortality of cardiovascular disease, cerebrovascular disease, ischemic heart disease and hypertensive disease, as well as air pollution concentrations and weather conditions.
We used Poisson regression with a distributed lag non-linear model to examine the effects of extremely high and low ambient temperatures on cause-specific cardiovascular mortality. Results: For all cause-specific cardiovascular mortality, Beijing had stronger cold and hot effects than those in Shanghai. The cold effects on cause-specific cardiovascular mortality reached the strongest at lag 0-27, while the hot effects reached the strongest at lag 0-14. The effects of extremely low and high temperatures differed by mortality types in the two cities. Hypertensive disease in Beijing was particularly susceptible to both extremely high and low temperatures; while for Shanghai, people with ischemic heart disease showed the greatest relative risk (RRs = 1.16, 95% CI: 1.03, 1.34) to extremely low temperature. Conclusion: People with hypertensive disease were particularly susceptible to extremely low and high temperatures in Beijing. People with ischemic heart disease in Shanghai showed greater susceptibility to extremely cold days.

Funding Acknowledgement:  National Science Foundation of China [81372950]

Funding Text:  We thank the Beijing and Shanghai Municipal Environmental Monitoring centers for providing air pollution data. Additionally, we thank the China Meteorological data-sharing service system for providing meteorology data. This study is funded by the National Science Foundation of China (No. 81372950).

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