Short-term exposure to temperature and mental health in North Carolina: a distributed lag nonlinear analysis

Adverse mental health outcomes have been associated with high temperatures in studies worldwide. Few studies explore a broad range of mental health outcomes, and to our knowledge, none are specific to NC, USA. This ecological study explored the relationship between ambient temperature and mental hea...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of biometeorology 2023-04, Vol.67 (4), p.573-586
Hauptverfasser: Minor, Tyler, Sugg, Margaret, Runkle, Jennifer D.
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container_title International journal of biometeorology
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creator Minor, Tyler
Sugg, Margaret
Runkle, Jennifer D.
description Adverse mental health outcomes have been associated with high temperatures in studies worldwide. Few studies explore a broad range of mental health outcomes, and to our knowledge, none are specific to NC, USA. This ecological study explored the relationship between ambient temperature and mental health outcomes (suicide, self-harm and suicide ideation, anxiety and stress, mood disorders, and depression) in six urban counties across the state of NC, USA. We applied a quasi-Poisson generalized linear model combined with a distributed lag nonlinear model (DLNM) to examine the short-term effects of daily ambient temperature on emergency admissions for mental health conditions (2016 to 2018) and violent deaths (2004 to 2018). The results were predominately insignificant, with some key exceptions. The county with the greatest temperature range (Wake) displays higher levels of significance, while counties with the lowest temperature ranges (New Hanover and Pitt) are almost entirely insignificant. Self-harm and suicidal ideation peak in the warm months (July) and generally exhibit a protective effect at lower temperatures and shorter lag intervals. Whereas anxiety, depression, and major depressive disorders peak in the cooler months (May and September). Suicide is the only outcome that favored a 20-day lag period in the sensitivity analysis, although the association with temperature was insignificant. Our findings suggest additional research is needed across a suite of mental health outcomes to fully understand the effects of temperatures on mental health.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00484-023-02436-0
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Self-harm and suicidal ideation peak in the warm months (July) and generally exhibit a protective effect at lower temperatures and shorter lag intervals. Whereas anxiety, depression, and major depressive disorders peak in the cooler months (May and September). Suicide is the only outcome that favored a 20-day lag period in the sensitivity analysis, although the association with temperature was insignificant. 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subjects Ambient temperature
Animal Physiology
Anxiety
Biological and Medical Physics
Biophysics
Daily temperatures
Depressive Disorder, Major
Earth and Environmental Science
Ecological studies
Environment
Environmental Health
Generalized linear models
High temperature
Hot Temperature
Humans
Low temperature
Mental depression
Mental disorders
Mental Health
Meteorology
Nonlinear analysis
North Carolina - epidemiology
Original Paper
Plant Physiology
Self destructive behavior
Self-injury
Sensitivity analysis
Statistical models
Suicide
Suicides & suicide attempts
Temperature
Temperature effects
title Short-term exposure to temperature and mental health in North Carolina: a distributed lag nonlinear analysis
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