The Burden of Heat-Related Mortality in Madrid: A Hundred Year Journey

Abstract Background. The association between ambient temperatures and health outcomes was extensively studied in the past decades, especially in the light of exacerbating climate change. Yet long-term studies focusing on the analysis of the changes of mortality answers to extreme heat are rare, particularly in the Mediterranean region. Minimum Mortality, or so-called Optimum temperatures are increasingly used to assess the levels of adaptation to changing temperatures. The warming of the air temperatures in Spain affected the entire national territory since the turn of the XX century. However, the number of studies exploring the evolution of adaptation to heat and relying on multidecadal time-series data in Spain at any administrative level is very limited. To our knowledge, the present research is the first one to leverage daily mortality and temperature data in the city of Madrid since the end of the XIX century until today. Methods. We examined the patterns of adaptation to extreme heat in the city of Madrid in the period from 1890 until 2020 using daily data on air temperature received from the meteorological stations and all-cause mortality from yearly books and civil registers. Using a distributed-lag nonlinear modelling approach we explored the complex heat-mortality relations and estimated the changes in the adaptation metrics by decade. Expected results. Based on the previous research by the authors performed at different spatial levels in Spain for shorter time periods, we expect to see an overall increase in the optimum temperatures over time, along with an increment of the air temperatures, especially in the last decades. We also expect to see a general reduction in the heat-attributable mortality fractions, which would indicate a progressive adaptation to overall warming of air temperatures and intensification of weather extremes. On the other hand, the dose-response relationship is expected to differ between sex- and age-groups, being supposedly the highest for older woman in the beginning of the study period. We expect a spatially different response of mortality to intense heat within the city due to different housing environment and development of urban infrastructures in each area of the city.

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Main Authors: Ordanovich, Dariya, Ramiro, Diego, Tobías, Aurelio
Format: actas de congreso biblioteca
Published: 2022-11-17
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/310122
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spelling dig-idaea-es-10261-3101222023-05-31T05:26:53Z The Burden of Heat-Related Mortality in Madrid: A Hundred Year Journey Ordanovich, Dariya Ramiro, Diego Tobías, Aurelio Abstract Background. The association between ambient temperatures and health outcomes was extensively studied in the past decades, especially in the light of exacerbating climate change. Yet long-term studies focusing on the analysis of the changes of mortality answers to extreme heat are rare, particularly in the Mediterranean region. Minimum Mortality, or so-called Optimum temperatures are increasingly used to assess the levels of adaptation to changing temperatures. The warming of the air temperatures in Spain affected the entire national territory since the turn of the XX century. However, the number of studies exploring the evolution of adaptation to heat and relying on multidecadal time-series data in Spain at any administrative level is very limited. To our knowledge, the present research is the first one to leverage daily mortality and temperature data in the city of Madrid since the end of the XIX century until today. Methods. We examined the patterns of adaptation to extreme heat in the city of Madrid in the period from 1890 until 2020 using daily data on air temperature received from the meteorological stations and all-cause mortality from yearly books and civil registers. Using a distributed-lag nonlinear modelling approach we explored the complex heat-mortality relations and estimated the changes in the adaptation metrics by decade. Expected results. Based on the previous research by the authors performed at different spatial levels in Spain for shorter time periods, we expect to see an overall increase in the optimum temperatures over time, along with an increment of the air temperatures, especially in the last decades. We also expect to see a general reduction in the heat-attributable mortality fractions, which would indicate a progressive adaptation to overall warming of air temperatures and intensification of weather extremes. On the other hand, the dose-response relationship is expected to differ between sex- and age-groups, being supposedly the highest for older woman in the beginning of the study period. We expect a spatially different response of mortality to intense heat within the city due to different housing environment and development of urban infrastructures in each area of the city. 2023-05-31T05:26:53Z 2023-05-31T05:26:53Z 2022-11-17 2023-05-31T05:26:53Z actas de congreso http://hdl.handle.net/10261/310122 Sí open
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country España
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libraryname Biblioteca del IDAEA España
description Abstract Background. The association between ambient temperatures and health outcomes was extensively studied in the past decades, especially in the light of exacerbating climate change. Yet long-term studies focusing on the analysis of the changes of mortality answers to extreme heat are rare, particularly in the Mediterranean region. Minimum Mortality, or so-called Optimum temperatures are increasingly used to assess the levels of adaptation to changing temperatures. The warming of the air temperatures in Spain affected the entire national territory since the turn of the XX century. However, the number of studies exploring the evolution of adaptation to heat and relying on multidecadal time-series data in Spain at any administrative level is very limited. To our knowledge, the present research is the first one to leverage daily mortality and temperature data in the city of Madrid since the end of the XIX century until today. Methods. We examined the patterns of adaptation to extreme heat in the city of Madrid in the period from 1890 until 2020 using daily data on air temperature received from the meteorological stations and all-cause mortality from yearly books and civil registers. Using a distributed-lag nonlinear modelling approach we explored the complex heat-mortality relations and estimated the changes in the adaptation metrics by decade. Expected results. Based on the previous research by the authors performed at different spatial levels in Spain for shorter time periods, we expect to see an overall increase in the optimum temperatures over time, along with an increment of the air temperatures, especially in the last decades. We also expect to see a general reduction in the heat-attributable mortality fractions, which would indicate a progressive adaptation to overall warming of air temperatures and intensification of weather extremes. On the other hand, the dose-response relationship is expected to differ between sex- and age-groups, being supposedly the highest for older woman in the beginning of the study period. We expect a spatially different response of mortality to intense heat within the city due to different housing environment and development of urban infrastructures in each area of the city.
format actas de congreso
author Ordanovich, Dariya
Ramiro, Diego
Tobías, Aurelio
spellingShingle Ordanovich, Dariya
Ramiro, Diego
Tobías, Aurelio
The Burden of Heat-Related Mortality in Madrid: A Hundred Year Journey
author_facet Ordanovich, Dariya
Ramiro, Diego
Tobías, Aurelio
author_sort Ordanovich, Dariya
title The Burden of Heat-Related Mortality in Madrid: A Hundred Year Journey
title_short The Burden of Heat-Related Mortality in Madrid: A Hundred Year Journey
title_full The Burden of Heat-Related Mortality in Madrid: A Hundred Year Journey
title_fullStr The Burden of Heat-Related Mortality in Madrid: A Hundred Year Journey
title_full_unstemmed The Burden of Heat-Related Mortality in Madrid: A Hundred Year Journey
title_sort burden of heat-related mortality in madrid: a hundred year journey
publishDate 2022-11-17
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/310122
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