2012
DOI: 10.1289/ehp.1003198
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Ambient Temperature and Morbidity: A Review of Epidemiological Evidence

Abstract: Objective: In this paper, we review the epidemiological evidence on the relationship between ambient temperature and morbidity. We assessed the methodological issues in previous studies and proposed future research directions.Data sources and data extraction: We searched the PubMed database for epidemiological studies on ambient temperature and morbidity of noncommunicable diseases published in refereed English journals before 30 June 2010. Forty relevant studies were identified. Of these, 24 examined the rela… Show more

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Cited by 516 publications
(371 citation statements)
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References 61 publications
(178 reference statements)
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“…We applied broad criteria for case ascertainment, including cases with definitive diagnostic findings of heat illness and cases with suggestive diagnostic classification. 14,25,26 The study has a number of limitations. Although not incorporated in this study, we anticipate that temperature, humidity and air pollution measures available from meteorological sources would provide a more refined analysis of risk estimates and may explain the annual variation and clustering of heat illnesses observed over contiguous days.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We applied broad criteria for case ascertainment, including cases with definitive diagnostic findings of heat illness and cases with suggestive diagnostic classification. 14,25,26 The study has a number of limitations. Although not incorporated in this study, we anticipate that temperature, humidity and air pollution measures available from meteorological sources would provide a more refined analysis of risk estimates and may explain the annual variation and clustering of heat illnesses observed over contiguous days.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast to thermal comfort studies, epidemiological studies do not deal with comfort but statistically link excess morbidity and mortality to temperature. These studies found for numerous cities that mortality increases during periods of extreme heat stress, as well as during periods of cold stress [128][129][130]. Often several stressors co-occur, e.g., air pollution (ozone O 3 , summer smog) exacerbated by heat stress [131,132].…”
Section: Impacts On Urbwellthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Если количество госпитализаций по поводу сердечной недо-статочности, ишемического инсульта и аритмий в жару только увеличивается (или не изменяется), то данные относительно ИМ более разнородны: в различных исследованиях на фоне высокой температуры воздуха показаны как рост, так и снижение заболе-ваемости ОИМ; некоторые авторы не отметили корреляционной связи [54]. В частности, в нашем исследовании динамики госпи-тализаций больных с ОКС в 2009-2012 гг.…”
Section: терапевтический архив 9 2015unclassified