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. 2016 Jan 13;9:10.3402/gha.v9.28738. doi: 10.3402/gha.v9.28738

Table 2.

The cumulative effects of high and low temperatures on cause-, age-, and sex-specific mortality

Statistic High temperature effecta (95% CI) Low temperature effectb (95% CI)
All-cause mortality 1.28 (1.04–1.58)* 1.78 (1.10–2.88)*
Cause-specific mortality
 Non-external 1.32 (1.07–1.63)* 1.88 (1.15–3.07)*
 Cardiovascular 1.6 (1.15–2.22)* 1.99 (0.92–4.28)
 Respiratory 2.45 (0.91–6.63) 0.47 (0.03–8.19)
 Cancer 1.08 (0.69–1.68) 1.71 (0.58–5.05)
Sex-specific mortality
 Male 1.28 (0.99–1.67) 1.42 (0.77–2.63)
 Female 1.27 (0.95–1.7) 2.19 (1.14–4.21)*
Age-specific mortality
 0–64 years old 1.05 (0.76–1.46) 1.43 (0.65–3.14)
 ≥65 years old 1.42 (1.11–1.83)* 2.0 (1.13–3.52)*
a

High temperature effect is the cumulative relative risk comparing the 99th temperature percentile (32.4°C) to the 50th temperature percentile (26.3°C) at lag 0–2.

b

Low temperature effect is the cumulative relative risk comparing the 1st temperature percentile (15.8°C) to the 50th temperature percentile (26.3°C) at lag 0–28.

*

Significant at p<0.05.