Environmental Sciences Proceedings (Aug 2023)

Developing a System for Integrated Environmental Information in Urban Areas: An Estimation of the Impact of Thermal Stress on Health

  • Dimitrios Melas,
  • Daphne Parliari,
  • Theo Economou,
  • Christos Giannaros,
  • Natalia Liora,
  • Sophia Papadogiannaki,
  • Serafeim Kontos,
  • Stavros Cheristanidis,
  • Donatella Occhiuto,
  • Maria Agostina Frezzini,
  • Jonilda Kushta,
  • Theodoros Christoudias,
  • Chrysanthos Savvides,
  • Ioannis Christofides,
  • Giampietro Casasanta,
  • Stefania Argentini,
  • Athina Progiou,
  • George Papastergios,
  • Apostolos Kelessis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/environsciproc2023026117
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 1
p. 117

Abstract

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Poor air quality remains the largest environmental health risk in Europe, despite the EU policy efforts. Especially in cities, the synergistic interactions between the urban heat island and urban pollution result in premature mortality, associated with cardiovascular and respiratory diseases. Mediterranean urban areas are particularly susceptible under the consideration that the intensity, frequency, and duration of heat waves will increase due to climate change. The LIFE SIRIUS project designates that air quality management needs to go beyond traditional approaches in order to consider synergistic effects. This paper assesses the impact of temperature on daily mortality from 2004 to 2019 in the Republic of Cyprus with the use of a Generalized Additive Model (GAM). The association between mean daily temperature and mortality is nonlinear, implying that a prompt rise in deaths occurs when temperatures are high, while for colder temperatures, the effect is delayed. We report an inverted J-shaped relationship between mean temperature and mortality, with the most prominent effects on human health documented at low temperatures. The population under study appears to be acclimatized to local conditions, as mortality increases after 10 days of exposure to the environmental risk. The results of this study will assist in the definition of city-specific thresholds above which health warnings for the protection of the local population will be issued, in the framework of LIFE SIRIUS.

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