Global Excess Deaths Associated with Heatwaves in 2023 and the Contribution of Human-Induced Climate Change
Hundessa S, Huang W, Xu R, Yang Z, Zhao Q, Gasparrini A, Armstrong B, Bell M, Huber V, Urban A, Coelho M, Sera F, Tong S, Royé D, Kyselý J, de'Donato F, Mistry M, Tobias A, Íñiguez C, Ragettli M, Hales S, Achilleos S, Klompmaker J, Li S, Guo Y, Network M. Global Excess Deaths Associated with Heatwaves in 2023 and the Contribution of Human-Induced Climate Change. The Innovation 2025, 101110. DOI: 10.1016/j.xinn.2025.101110.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchHuman-induced climate changeExcess deathsWithin-week variationsQuasi-Poisson regression modelPublic health interventionsClimate changeHealth interventionsMortality dataMortality burdenDeath ratioClimate mitigation strategiesHigh-resolution climateAssociated with heatwavesMeta-RegressionHealth impactsDeath rateGlobal deathsRegression modelsHigher mortality rateSpatial heterogeneityClimate scenariosMortality rateHeatwavesMortalityComprehensive assessmentTemporal trends in the association between temperature and firearm mortality
Choi H, Heo S, Bell M. Temporal trends in the association between temperature and firearm mortality. Environmental Research 2025, 275: 121384. PMID: 40081650, DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2025.121384.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchFirearm mortalityPublic health initiativesLow socioeconomic statusConditional logistic regressionFirearm mortality dataFirearm death ratesHealth inequalitiesMortality trendsAttributable fractionHealth initiativesCase-crossoverMortality dataSocioeconomic statusRacial/ethnic groupsTargeted interventionsBlack/African AmericanStratified analysisVulnerable populationsLogistic regressionWhite populationHealth impactsDeath rateFirearm deathsRace/ethnicityTemporal trends
This site is protected by hCaptcha and its Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply