气候变化
脆弱性(计算)
地中海气候
适应(眼睛)
地理
代表性浓度途径
表观温度
基线(sea)
置信区间
环境科学
人口学
气候学
环境卫生
气候模式
医学
气象学
生态学
生物
社会学
计算机科学
地质学
相对湿度
考古
内科学
神经科学
计算机安全
渔业
作者
Pierre Masselot,Malcolm Mistry,Shilpa Rao,Veronika Huber,Ana Monteiro,Evangelia Samoli,Massimo Stafoggia,Francesca de’Donato,David García-León,Juan-Carlos Ciscar,Luc Feyen,Alexandra Schneider,Klea Katsouyanni,Ana María Vicedo-Cabrera,Kristin Aunan,Antonio Gasparrini
出处
期刊:Nature Medicine
[Springer Nature]
日期:2025-01-27
卷期号:31 (4): 1294-1302
被引量:55
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41591-024-03452-2
摘要
Abstract Previous health impact assessments of temperature-related mortality in Europe indicated that the mortality burden attributable to cold is much larger than for heat. Questions remain as to whether climate change can result in a net decrease in temperature-related mortality. In this study, we estimated how climate change could affect future heat-related and cold-related mortality in 854 European urban areas, under several climate, demographic and adaptation scenarios. We showed that, with no adaptation to heat, the increase in heat-related deaths consistently exceeds any decrease in cold-related deaths across all considered scenarios in Europe. Under the lowest mitigation and adaptation scenario (SSP3-7.0), we estimate a net death burden due to climate change increasing by 49.9% and cumulating 2,345,410 (95% confidence interval = 327,603 to 4,775,853) climate change-related deaths between 2015 and 2099. This net effect would remain positive even under high adaptation scenarios, whereby a risk attenuation of 50% is still insufficient to reverse the trend under SSP3-7.0. Regional differences suggest a slight net decrease of death rates in Northern European countries but high vulnerability of the Mediterranean region and Eastern Europe areas. Unless strong mitigation and adaptation measures are implemented, most European cities should experience an increase of their temperature-related mortality burden.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI