医学
相对风险
置信区间
人口学
泊松回归
大洪水
分布滞后
随机效应模型
环境卫生
荟萃分析
地理
人口
统计
内科学
数学
社会学
考古
作者
Zhengyu Yang,Wenzhong Huang,Joanne E. McKenzie,Rongbin Xu,Yu Pei,Tingting Ye,Bo Wen,Antonio Gasparrini,Ben Armstrong,Shilu Tong,Éric Lavigne,Joana Madureira,Jan Kyselý,Hyewon Lee,Shanshan Li
出处
期刊:BMJ
[BMJ]
日期:2023-10-04
卷期号:: e075081-e075081
被引量:4
标识
DOI:10.1136/bmj-2023-075081
摘要
To evaluate lag-response associations and effect modifications of exposure to floods with risks of all cause, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality on a global scale.Time series study.761 communities in 35 countries or territories with at least one flood event during the study period.Multi-Country Multi-City Collaborative Research Network database, Australian Cause of Death Unit Record File, New Zealand Integrated Data Infrastructure, and the International Network for the Demographic Evaluation of Populations and their Health Network database.The main outcome was daily counts of deaths. An estimation for the lag-response association between flood and daily mortality risk was modelled, and the relative risks over the lag period were cumulated to calculate overall effects. Attributable fractions of mortality due to floods were further calculated. A quasi-Poisson model with a distributed lag non-linear function was used to examine how daily death risk was associated with flooded days in each community, and then the community specific associations were pooled using random effects multivariate meta-analyses. Flooded days were defined as days from the start date to the end date of flood events.A total of 47.6 million all cause deaths, 11.1 million cardiovascular deaths, and 4.9 million respiratory deaths were analysed. Over the 761 communities, mortality risks increased and persisted for up to 60 days (50 days for cardiovascular mortality) after a flooded day. The cumulative relative risks for all cause, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality were 1.021 (95% confidence interval 1.006 to 1.036), 1.026 (1.005 to 1.047), and 1.049 (1.008 to 1.092), respectively. The associations varied across countries or territories and regions. The flood-mortality associations appeared to be modified by climate type and were stronger in low income countries and in populations with a low human development index or high proportion of older people. In communities impacted by flood, up to 0.10% of all cause deaths, 0.18% of cardiovascular deaths, and 0.41% of respiratory deaths were attributed to floods.This study found that the risks of all cause, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality increased for up to 60 days after exposure to flood and the associations could vary by local climate type, socioeconomic status, and older age.
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