Počet záznamů: 1  

Heat-related morbidity and mortality for ischaemic heart disease and cerebrovascular disease in the Czech Republic

  1. 1.
    SYSNO ASEP0433771
    Druh ASEPA - Abstrakt
    Zařazení RIVZáznam nebyl označen do RIV
    Zařazení RIVNení vybrán druh dokumentu
    NázevHeat-related morbidity and mortality for ischaemic heart disease and cerebrovascular disease in the Czech Republic
    Tvůrce(i) Davídkovová, Hana (UFA-U) RID, ORCID
    Plavcová, Eva (UFA-U) RID, ORCID
    Kyncl, J. (CZ)
    Kříž, B. (CZ)
    Kyselý, Jan (UFA-U) RID, ORCID
    Zdroj.dok.[Abstracts]. - Darmsatdt : EUMETSAT, 2014
    S. 128-128
    Poč.str.1 s.
    AkceInternational Congress of Biometeorology /20th/
    Datum konání28.09.2014–02.10.2014
    Místo konáníCleveland
    ZeměUS - Spojené státy americké
    Typ akceWRD
    Země vyd.DE - Německo
    Vědní obor RIVDG - Vědy o atmosféře, meteorologie
    Institucionální podporaUFA-U - RVO:68378289
    AnotaceThe study examines effects of hot spells on cardiovascular disease (CVD) morbidity and mortality in the population of the Czech Republic, with emphasis on differences between ischaemic heart disease (IHD) and cerebrovascular disease (CD) and between morbidity and mortality. Daily data on CVD morbidity (hospital admissions) and mortality over 1994–2009 were obtained from national hospitalization and mortality registers and standardized to account for long-term changes as well as seasonal and weekly cycles. Hot spells were defined as periods of at least two consecutive days with average daily air temperature anomalies above the 95% quantile during June to August. Relative deviations of mortality and morbidity from the baseline were evaluated. Hot spells were associated with excess mortality for all examined cardiovascular causes (CVD, IHD and CD). The increases were more pronounced for CD than IHD mortality in most population groups, mainly in males. In the younger population (0–64 years), however, significant excess mortality was observed for IHD while there was no excess mortality for CD. Excess CVD mortality was not accompanied by increases in hospital admissions and below-expected-levels of morbidity prevailed during hot spells, particularly for IHD in the elderly. This suggests that out-of-hospital deaths represent a major part of excess CVD mortality during heat and that for in-hospital excess deaths CVD is a masked comorbid condition rather than the primary diagnosis responsible for hospitalization.
    PracovištěÚstav fyziky atmosféry
    KontaktKateřina Adamovičová, adamovicova@ufa.cas.cz, Tel.: 272 016 012 ; Kateřina Potužníková, kaca@ufa.cas.cz, Tel.: 272 016 019
    Rok sběru2015
Počet záznamů: 1  

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