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Effect modification of greenness on the association between heat and mortality: a multi-city multi-country study

Choi, H. M. and Lee, W. and Heo, S. and Urban, A. and Entezari, A. and Vicedo-Cabrera, A. and Zanobetti, A. and Analitis, A. and Gasparrini, A. and Tobias, A. and Armstrong, B. and Forsberg, B. and Íñiguez, C. and Åström, C. and Roye, D. and Indermitte, E. and Lavigne, E. and Mayvaneh, F. and Acquaotta, F. and Sera, F. and Orru, H. and Kim, H. and Kyselý, J. and Madureira, J. and Schwartz, J. and Jaakkola, J. J. K. and Katsouyanni, K. and Hurtado Diaz, M. and Ragettli, M. S. and Pascal, M. and Ryti, M. and Scovronick, N. and Osorio, N. and Tong, S. and Seposo, X. and Guo, Y. -L. L. and Guo, Y. and Bell, M. L.. (2022) Effect modification of greenness on the association between heat and mortality: a multi-city multi-country study. eBioMedicine, 84. p. 104251.

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Abstract

Background: Identifying how greenspace impacts the temperature-mortality relationship in urban environments is crucial, especially given climate change and rapid urbanization. To date, studies on this topic have indicated conflicting findings and typically focus on a localized area or single country. We evaluated the effect modification of greenspace on heat-related mortality in a global setting. Methods: We collected daily ambient temperature and mortality data for 452 locations in 24 countries and used Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI) as the greenspace measurement. We used distributed lag non-linear model to estimate the heat-mortality relationship in each city and evaluated the effect modification of greenspace. Findings: Cities with high greenspace value had the lowest heat-mortality relative risk of 1·19 (95% CI: 1·13, 1·25), while the heat-related relative risk was 1·46 (95% CI: 1·31, 1·62) for cities with low greenspace. A 1% increase of greenspace in all cities was predicted to reduce all-cause heat-related mortality by 0·48 (95% CI: 0·24, 0·63), decreasing approximately 50 excess deaths per year. 20% increase of greenspace would reduce 9·02% (95%CI: 8·88, 9·16) heat-related attributable fraction, and this would result in saving approximately 933 excess deaths per year in 24 countries. Interpretation: Our findings can inform communities on the potential health benefits of greenspaces in the urban environment and mitigation measures regarding the impacts of climate change.
Faculties and Departments:09 Associated Institutions > Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH)
09 Associated Institutions > Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH) > Department of Epidemiology and Public Health (EPH) > Environmental Exposures and Health Systems Research > Physical Hazards and Health (Röösli)
UniBasel Contributors:Ragettli, Martina
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Research Article
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal article
Language:English
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Last Modified:21 Dec 2022 17:29
Deposited On:21 Dec 2022 17:29

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