A new look at weather-related health impacts through functional regression

10/25/2018
by   Pierre Masselot, et al.
0

A major challenge of climate change adaptation is to assess the effect of changing weather on human health. In spite of an increasing literature on the weather-related health subject, many aspect of the relationship are not known, limiting the predictive power of epidemiologic models. The present paper proposes new models to improve the performances of the currently used ones. The proposed models are based on functional data analysis (FDA), a statistical framework dealing with continuous curves instead of scalar time series. The models are applied to the temperature-related cardiovascular mortality issue in Montreal. By making use of the whole information available, the proposed models improve the prediction of cardiovascular mortality according to temperature. In addition, results shed new lights on the relationship by quantifying physiological adaptation effects. These results, not found with classical model, illustrate the potential of FDA approaches.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
02/21/2018

Aggregating the response in time series regression models, applied to weather-related cardiovascular mortality

In environmental epidemiology studies, health response data (e.g. hospit...
research
09/23/2021

Quantile based modelling of diurnal temperature range with the five-parameter lambda distribution

Diurnal temperature range is an important variable in climate science th...
research
08/23/2018

On model selection criteria for climate change impact studies

Climate change impact studies inform policymakers on the estimated damag...
research
01/04/2022

Clustering and Forecasting Multiple Functional Time Series

Modelling and forecasting homogeneous age-specific mortality rates of mu...
research
10/21/2021

Day-ahead Forecasts of Air Temperature

Air temperature is an essential factor that directly impacts the weather...
research
09/29/2019

Comparing statistical methods to predict leptospirosis incidence using hydro-climatic covariables

Leptospiroris, the infectious disease caused by the spirochete bacteria ...
research
05/04/2017

Towards Simulation and Risk Assessment of Weather-Related Cascading Outages

Weather and environmental factors are verified to have played significan...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset