Association between air temperature and self-perceived health status in Southern Germany: Results from KORA FIT study
Sohail H, Zhang S, Kraus U, Mikkonen S, Breitner S, Wolf K, Nikolaou N, Peters A, Lanki T, Schneider A. Association between air temperature and self-perceived health status in Southern Germany: Results from KORA FIT study. International Journal Of Hygiene And Environmental Health 2024, 262: 114431. PMID: 39096579, DOI: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2024.114431.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchSelf-perceived health statusCompare self-rated healthSelf-rated healthHealth-related quality of lifeHealth statusDistributed lag non-linear modelCooperative Health ResearchHealth-related qualityEQ-5D-5L dimensionsEuroQol visual analog scaleShort-term associationsCross-sectional analysisQuality of lifeFitness studiesAugsburg regionParticipants' homesPopulation-level studiesHealth careHealth researchVisual analog scaleAssociation of heatEQ-VASHealth measuresHealthAnalog scaleSex-specific associations of environmental exposures with prevalent diabetes and obesity – Results from the KORA Fit study
Niedermayer F, Wolf K, Zhang S, Dallavalle M, Nikolaou N, Schwettmann L, Selsam P, Hoffmann B, Schneider A, Peters A. Sex-specific associations of environmental exposures with prevalent diabetes and obesity – Results from the KORA Fit study. Environmental Research 2024, 252: 118965. PMID: 38642640, DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2024.118965.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAssociations of environmental exposuresAssociated with higher body-mass indexBody-mass indexHigh body-mass indexSex-specific associationsPrevalent diabetesEnvironmental exposuresAssociated with lower obesity prevalenceUrban menRural womenAssociated with diabetes prevalenceEvaluated sex-specific associationsLower obesity prevalenceAir pollutionAnalyzed cross-sectional dataGerman population-based cohortPopulation-based cohortSusceptibility to air pollutionSex-stratified analysesLack of greennessEffects of environmental exposuresFitness studiesSusceptibility to environmental exposuresSurrounding greennessCross-sectional data