학술논문

Climate Change, Summer Temperature, and Heat-Related Mortality in Finland: Multicohort Study with Projections for a Sustainable vs. Fossil-Fueled Future to 2050.
Document Type
Article
Source
Environmental Health Perspectives. Dec2023, Vol. 131 Issue 12, p127020-1-127020-16. 16p.
Subject
*PATIENT aftercare
*POPULATION density
*SCIENTIFIC observation
*NOSOLOGY
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of heat
*HUMIDITY
*MULTIVARIATE analysis
*FOSSIL fuels
*REGRESSION analysis
*RISK assessment
*SOCIOECONOMIC factors
*RESEARCH funding
*ATTRIBUTION (Social psychology)
*TIME series analysis
*STATISTICAL hypothesis testing
*METROPOLITAN areas
*GREENHOUSE effect
*SUSTAINABLE development
*ELECTRONIC health records
*RESIDENTIAL patterns
*CROSSOVER trials
*ODDS ratio
*HEALTH facility design & construction
*NATURE
*LOGISTIC regression analysis
*DATA analysis software
*CLIMATE change
*LONGITUDINAL method
*ENVIRONMENTAL exposure
*POISSON distribution
*SECONDARY analysis
MORTALITY risk factors
CARDIOVASCULAR disease related mortality
Language
ISSN
0091-6765
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Climate change scenarios illustrate various pathways in terms of global warming ranging from “sustainable development” (Shared Socioeconomic Pathway SSP1-1.9), the best-case scenario, to ‘fossil-fueled development’ (SSP5-8.5), the worst-case scenario. OBJECTIVES: We examined the extent to which increase in daily average urban summer temperature is associated with future cause-specific mortality and projected heat-related mortality burden for the current warming trend and these two scenarios. METHODS: We did an observational cohort study of 363,754 participants living in six cities in Finland. Using residential addresses, participants were linked to daily temperature records and electronic death records from national registries during summers (1 May to 30 September) 2000 to 2018. For each day of observation, heat index (average daily air temperature weighted by humidity) for the preceding 7 d was calculated for participants’ residential area using a geographic grid at a spatial resolution of 1 km × 1 km. We examined associations of the summer heat index with risk of death by cause for all participants adjusting for a wide range of individual-level covariates and in subsidiary analyses using case-crossover design, computed the related period population attributable fraction (PAF), and projected change in PAF from summers 2000–2018 compared with those in 2030–2050. RESULTS: During a cohort total exposure period of 582,111,979 summer days (3,880,746 person-summers), we recorded 4,094 deaths, including 949 from cardiovascular disease. The multivariable-adjusted rate ratio (RR) for high (≥21°C) vs. reference (14-15°C) heat index was 1.70 (95% CI: 1.28, 2.27) for cardiovascular mortality, but it did not reach statistical significance for noncardiovascular deaths, RR=1.14 (95% CI: 0.96, 1.36), a finding replicated in case-crossover analysis. According to projections for 2030-2050, PAF of summertime cardiovascular mortality attributable to high heat will be 4.4% (1.8%-7.3%) under the sustainable development scenario, but 7.6% (3.2%-12.3%) under the fossil-fueled development scenario. In the six cities, the estimated annual number of summertime heat-related cardiovascular deaths under the two scenarios will be 174 and 298 for a total population of 1,759,468 people. DISCUSSION: The increase in average urban summer temperature will raise heat-related cardiovascular mortality burden. The estimated magnitude of this burden is >1.5 times greater if future climate change is driven by fossil fuels rather than sustainable development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]