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High ambient temperature and risk of hospitalization for gastrointestinal infection in Brazil: A nationwide case-crossover study during 2000–2015

journal contribution
posted on 2023-02-20, 04:37 authored by Q Zhao, S Li, MSZS Coelho, PHN Saldiva, Rachel HuxleyRachel Huxley, Y Guo
Background: The burden of gastrointestinal infections related to hot ambient temperature remains largely unexplored in low-to-middle income countries which have most of the cases globally and are experiencing the greatest impact from climate change. The situation is particularly true in Brazil. Objectives: Using medical records covering over 78 % of population, we quantify the association between high temperature and risk of hospitalization for gastrointestinal infection in Brazil between 2000 and 2015. Methods: Data on hospitalization for gastrointestinal infection and weather conditions were collected from 1814 Brazilian cities during the 2000–2015 hot seasons. A time-stratified case-crossover design was used to estimate the association. Stratified analyses were performed by region, sex, age-group, type of infection and early/late study period. Results: For every 5 °C increase in mean daily temperature, the cumulative odds ratio (OR) of hospitalization over 0–9 days was 1.22 [95 % confidence interval (CI): 1.21, 1.23] at the national level, reaching its maximum in the south and its minimum in the north. The strength of association tended to decline across successive age-groups, with infants < 1 year most susceptible. The effect estimates were similar for men and women. Waterborne and foodborne infections were more associated with high temperature than the ‘others’ and ‘idiopathic’ groups. There was no substantial change in the association over the 16-year study period. Discussion: Our findings indicate that exposure to high temperature is associated with increased risk of hospitalization for gastrointestinal infection in the hot season, with the strength varying by region, population subgroup and infection type. There was no evidence to indicate adaptation to heat over the study duration.

History

Journal

Science of the Total Environment

Volume

849

Article number

ARTN 157836

Location

Netherlands

ISSN

0048-9697

eISSN

1879-1026

Language

English

Publisher

ELSEVIER