0000000000200022

AUTHOR

Dominic Royé

0000-0002-5516-6396

showing 4 related works from this author

Temperature-related effects on respiratory medical prescriptions in Spain

2021

Background The increased risk of mortality during periods of high and low temperatures has been well established. However, most of the studies used daily counts of deaths or hospitalisations as health outcomes, although they are the ones at the top of the health impact pyramid reflecting only a limited proportion of patients with the most severe cases. Objectives This study evaluates the relationship between short-term exposure to the daily mean temperature and medication prescribed for the respiratory system in five Spanish cities. Methods We fitted time series regression models to cause-specific medical prescriptions, including different respiratory subgroups and age groups. We included a…

Temperaturesmedicine.medical_specialtyHot Temperaturebusiness.industryRespiratory Tract DiseasesTemperatureMedical PrescriptionsDrugsMedical prescriptionsBiochemistryExposureCold TemperaturePrescriptionsSpainFamily medicineRespiratorymedicineHumansCitiesMortalityMedical prescriptionbusinessGeneral Environmental ScienceEnvironmental Research
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Global, regional, and national burden of mortality associated with non-optimal ambient temperatures from 2000 to 2019: a three-stage modelling study

2021

Background: Exposure to cold or hot temperatures is associated with premature deaths. We aimed to evaluate the global, regional, and national mortality burden associated with non-optimal ambient temperatures. Methods: In this modelling study, we collected time-series data on mortality and ambient temperatures from 750 locations in 43 countries and five meta-predictors at a grid size of 0·5° × 0·5° across the globe. A three-stage analysis strategy was used. First, the temperature–mortality association was fitted for each location by use of a time-series regression. Second, a multivariate meta-regression model was built between location-specific estimates and meta-predictors. Finally, the gri…

Multivariate statisticsHot TemperatureHealth (social science)Grid sizeMedicine (miscellaneous)mortality ratemedical researchtemperature mortalityBackground exposureGE1-350residentBurden of MortalityAmbient temperature610 Medicine & healthThree stageHealth PolicyMortality rateadultpublic healthTemperaturearticlePublic Health Global Health Social Medicine and EpidemiologyCold TemperatureGeographyfemaleModelling Studyweatherenvironmental temperatureAvaliação do Risco360 Social problems & social servicesNon-optimal Ambient TemperaturesAsiaClimate Change610 Medicine & healthEastern Europemale360 Social problems & social servicescontrolled studyhumanMortalityNational healthAustraliaPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthmajor clinical studyEnvironmental sciencesPremature deathFolkhälsovetenskap global hälsa socialmedicin och epidemiologiAfrica south of the SaharaResearch counciltime series analysiscold stressheatDeterminantes da Saúde e da DoençaDemography
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Mortality risk attributable to wildfire-related PM2·5 pollution: a global time series study in 749 locations

2021

Summary Background Many regions of the world are now facing more frequent and unprecedentedly large wildfires. However, the association between wildfire-related PM2·5 and mortality has not been well characterised. We aimed to comprehensively assess the association between short-term exposure to wildfire-related PM2·5 and mortality across various regions of the world. Methods For this time series study, data on daily counts of deaths for all causes, cardiovascular causes, and respiratory causes were collected from 749 cities in 43 countries and regions during 2000–16. Daily concentrations of wildfire-related PM2·5 were estimated using the three-dimensional chemical transport model GEOS-Chem …

PollutionHealth (social science)all cause mortalitymedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationMedicine (miscellaneous)610 Medicine & healthPM2.5medical researchwildfirehealth hazard360 Social problems & social servicescardiovascular mortalityEnvironmental healthMedicinecontrolled studyhumaneducation610 Medicine & healthMortality riskCardiovascular mortalitymedia_commonSeries (stratigraphy)education.field_of_studybusiness.industryHealth Policypublic healthPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healtharticlerisk assessmentPublic Health Global Health Social Medicine and Epidemiologyshort term exposurePollutionFolkhälsovetenskap global hälsa socialmedicin och epidemiologiIncreased riskrisk factorcityRelative risktime series analysisAttributable riskPM 2·5 Pollutionmortality riskDeterminantes da Saúde e da DoençaGenotoxicidade Ambientalbusiness360 Social problems & social servicesGlobal timemeta analysis
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Comparison of temperature–mortality associations using observed weather station and reanalysis data in 52 Spanish cities

2020

Abstract Background Most studies use temperature observation data from weather stations near the analyzed region or city as the reference point for the exposure-response association. Climatic reanalysis data sets have already been used for climate studies, but are not yet used routinely in environmental epidemiology. Methods We compared the mortality-temperature association using weather station temperature and ERA-5 reanalysis data for the 52 provincial capital cities in Spain, using time-series regression with distributed lag non-linear models. Results The shape of temperature distribution is very close between the weather station and ERA-5 reanalysis data (correlation from 0.90 to 0.99).…

Distributed lagHot TemperatureProvincial capitalDistribution (economics)010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesBiochemistryWeather station03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineCitiesMortalityObservation dataWeather0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental ScienceEstimationbusiness.industryTemperatureRegressionCold TemperatureSpainClimatologyEnvironmental sciencebusinessEnvironmental epidemiology
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