Heat-related mortality in Mexico: A multi-scale spatial analysis of extreme heat effects and municipality-level vulnerability

IF 9.7 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Environment International Pub Date : 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.envint.2024.109231
Lara Schwarz , Chen Chen , Javier Emmanuel Castillo Quiñones , L.C. Aguilar-Dodier , Kristen Hansen , Jaime Reyes Sanchez , David J.X. González , Gordon McCord , Tarik Benmarhnia
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Abstract

Understanding effects of extreme heat across diverse settings is critical as social determinants play an important role in modifying heat-related risks. We apply a multi-scale analysis to understand spatial variation in the effects of heat across Mexico and explore factors that are explaining heterogeneity. Daily all-cause mortality was collected from the Mexican Secretary of Health and municipality-specific extreme heat events were estimated using population-weighted temperatures from 1998 to 2019 using Daymet and WorldPop datasets. We analyzed the association between single-day extreme heat events defined at the 99th percentile of the same-day maximum temperature and mortality, and seven heat threshold metrics based on relative and absolute scales were considered as sensitivity analyses. A time-stratified case-crossover was applied to evaluate heat impacts across 32 states in Mexico. A within-community matched design with Bayesian Hierarchical model explored effects across 2456 municipalities. A random-effects meta-regression was applied to understand which municipality-level socio-demographic characteristics such as education, age and housing predicted observed spatial heterogeneity. Extreme heat increased the odds of mortality overall, and this was consistent across extreme heat thresholds. At the state level, extreme heat events showed highest impact on mortality in Tabasco [OR: 1.23, 95% CI: 1.17, 1.30]. The municipality-level spatial analysis showed substantial differences across regions with highest effects observed along the eastern, southwestern and Sonora coasts. Municipalities with older populations, higher marginalization, lower education, and poorer housing conditions were more vulnerable to heat effects. Understanding the differential risks of extreme heat events at varying scales is important to prioritize at-risk populations in action plans and policies to reduce their burden.
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墨西哥与高温有关的死亡率:对极端高温影响和城市脆弱性的多尺度空间分析
了解极端高温在不同环境下的影响至关重要,因为社会决定因素在改变与热有关的风险方面发挥着重要作用。我们应用多尺度分析来了解墨西哥各地热影响的空间变化,并探索解释异质性的因素。从墨西哥卫生部长处收集了每日全因死亡率,并使用Daymet和WorldPop数据集,利用1998年至2019年的人口加权温度估计了城市特定的极端高温事件。我们分析了以当天最高温度的第99百分位定义的单日极端高温事件与死亡率之间的关系,并将基于相对和绝对尺度的七个热阈值指标视为敏感性分析。时间分层案例交叉应用于评估墨西哥32个州的热影响。基于贝叶斯层次模型的社区内匹配设计探讨了2456个城市的影响。采用随机效应元回归分析了城市层面的社会人口学特征(如教育、年龄和住房)对观察到的空间异质性的预测。总的来说,极端高温增加了死亡率,这在极端高温阈值中是一致的。在州一级,极端高温事件对塔巴斯科州的死亡率影响最大[OR: 1.23, 95% CI: 1.17, 1.30]。城市层面的空间分析显示,不同地区之间存在显著差异,东部、西南部和索诺拉海岸的影响最大。人口较老、边缘化程度较高、教育程度较低、住房条件较差的城市更容易受到热效应的影响。了解不同规模极端高温事件的不同风险对于在行动计划和政策中优先考虑高危人群以减轻其负担非常重要。
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来源期刊
Environment International
Environment International 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
21.90
自引率
3.40%
发文量
734
审稿时长
2.8 months
期刊介绍: Environmental Health publishes manuscripts focusing on critical aspects of environmental and occupational medicine, including studies in toxicology and epidemiology, to illuminate the human health implications of exposure to environmental hazards. The journal adopts an open-access model and practices open peer review. It caters to scientists and practitioners across all environmental science domains, directly or indirectly impacting human health and well-being. With a commitment to enhancing the prevention of environmentally-related health risks, Environmental Health serves as a public health journal for the community and scientists engaged in matters of public health significance concerning the environment.
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