articleAmerican Journal of EpidemiologyJan 1, 2002BRONZE OA

Temperature and Mortality in 11 Cities of the Eastern United States

Johns Hopkins University

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Abstract

Episodes of extremely hot or cold temperatures are associated with increased mortality. Time-series analyses show an association between temperature and mortality across a range of less extreme temperatures. In this paper, the authors describe the temperature-mortality association for 11 large eastern US cities in 1973-1994 by estimating the relative risks of mortality using log-linear regression analysis for time-series data and by exploring city characteristics associated with variations in this temperature-mortality relation. Current and recent days' temperatures were the weather components most strongly predictive of mortality, and mortality risk generally decreased as temperature increased from the…

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Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Latitude
  • Apparent temperature
  • Demography
  • Geography
  • Population
  • Mortality rate
  • Environmental science
  • Mean radiant temperature
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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