The effect of cold and heat waves on mortality in Urmia a cold region in the North West of Iran.

Rahim Sharafkhani, Narges Khanjani, Bahram Bakhtiari, Yunes Jahani, Rasool Entezarmahdi
Author Information
  1. Rahim Sharafkhani: School of Public Health, Khoy University of Medical Sciences, Khoy, Iran. Electronic address: r_sharafkhani@yahoo.com.
  2. Narges Khanjani: Environmental Health Engineering Research Center, Kerman University of Medical Sciences, Kerman, Iran; Monash Centre for Occupational & Environmental Health, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. Electronic address: n_khanjani@kmu.ac.ir.
  3. Bahram Bakhtiari: Water Engineering Department, Faculty of Agriculture, Shahid Bahonar University of Kerman, Kerman, Iran. Electronic address: Drbakhtiari@uk.ac.ir.
  4. Yunes Jahani: Modeling in Health Research Center, Institute for Futures Studies in Health, Kerman University of Medical Sciences, Kerman, Iran. Electronic address: yonesjahani@yahoo.com.
  5. Rasool Entezarmahdi: Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Urmia University of Medical Sciences, Urmia, Iran. Electronic address: r_entezar_mahdi@yahoo.com.

Abstract

Few studies have investigated the different extreme temperature effects (heat-cold) of one geographical location at the same time in Iran. This study was conducted to assess the impact of heat and cold waves on mortality in Urmia city, which has a cold and mountainous climate. Distributed Lag Non-linear Models combined with a quasi-Poisson regression were used to assess the impact of heat (HW) and cold waves (CW) on mortality in subgroups, controlled for potential confounders such as long-term trend of daily mortality, day of week effect, holidays, mean temperature, humidity, wind speed and air pollutants. The heat/cold effect was divided into two general categories A-main effect (the effect caused by temperature), B-added effect (the effect caused by persistence of extreme temperature). Results show that there was no relation between HW and respiratory and cardiovascular death, but in main effects, HW significantly increased, the risk of Non-Accidental Death (NAD) in lag 0 (Cumulative Excess Risk (CER)  = 31(CI; 4-65)). Also in added effects, HW had a significant effect on NAD (CER  = 31(CI; 5, 51), CER  = 26(CI; 6, 48)). There was no relation between CW and respiratory death and cardiovascular death, but in added effects, CW significantly decreased, the risk of non-accidental death in initial lags (CER  = -19 (CI; -35, -2)). It seems that high temperatures and heat waves increase the risk of non-accidental mortality in northwest of Iran.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Aged
Cold Temperature
Female
Hot Temperature
Humans
Iran
Male
Mortality

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