Short-term association between hot nights and mortality: a multicountry analysis in 178 locations considering hourly ambient temperature
Royé D, Sera F, Tobías A, Hashizume M, Honda Y, Kim H, Vicedo-Cabrera A, Tong S, Lavigne E, Kyselý J, Pascal M, de’Donato F, da Silva S, Madureira J, Huber V, Urban A, Schwartz J, Bell M, Armstrong B, Iñiguez C, Network M, Abrutzky R, de Sousa Zanotti Stagliorio Coelho M, Saldiva P, Correa P, Ortega N, Kan H, Osorio S, Gasparrini A, Achilleos S, Orru H, Indermitte E, Ryti N, Schneider A, Katsouyanni K, Analitis A, Mayvaneh F, Enteyari A, Raz R, Michelozzi P, Kim Y, Alahmad B, Cauchi J, Diaz M, Arellano E, Overcenco A, Klompmaker J, Carrasco G, Seposo X, Chua P, Holobaca I, Guo Y, Jaakkola J, Scovronick N, Acquaotta F, Lee W, Forsberg B, Ragettli M, Li S, Zanobetti A, Colistro V, Dang T, Van Dung. Short-term association between hot nights and mortality: a multicountry analysis in 178 locations considering hourly ambient temperature. Environment International 2025, 203: 109719. PMID: 40882422, DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2025.109719.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPublic health strategiesHealth strategiesHot nightsMortality riskPreventive public health strategiesHourly ambient temperatureShort-term associationsHeat-related mortality riskMulticountry analysisDaily maximum temperatureDaily mortalityPooled resultsWarm seasonClimate changeMortalityAdaptation effortsAbsolute humidityMaximum temperatureRiskAssociationDecision-making
This site is protected by hCaptcha and its Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply