The Effect of High and Low Ambient Temperature on Infant Health: A Systematic Review

Children, and particularly infants, have physiological, anatomic, and social factors that increase vulnerability to temperature extremes. We performed a systematic review to explore the association between acute adverse infant outcomes (children 0-1 years) and exposure to high and low ambient temper...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2022-07, Vol.19 (15), p.9109
Hauptverfasser: Lakhoo, Darshnika Pemi, Blake, Helen Abigail, Chersich, Matthew Francis, Nakstad, Britt, Kovats, Sari
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container_title International journal of environmental research and public health
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creator Lakhoo, Darshnika Pemi
Blake, Helen Abigail
Chersich, Matthew Francis
Nakstad, Britt
Kovats, Sari
description Children, and particularly infants, have physiological, anatomic, and social factors that increase vulnerability to temperature extremes. We performed a systematic review to explore the association between acute adverse infant outcomes (children 0-1 years) and exposure to high and low ambient temperatures. MEDLINE (Pubmed), Embase, CINAHL Plus, and Global Health were searched alongside the reference lists of key papers. We included published journal papers in English that assessed adverse infant outcomes related to short-term weather-related temperature exposure. Twenty-six studies met our inclusion criteria. Outcomes assessed included: infant mortality ( = 9), sudden infant death syndrome ( = 5), hospital visits or admissions ( = 5), infectious disease outcomes ( = 5), and neonatal conditions such as jaundice ( = 2). Higher temperatures were associated with increased risk of acute infant mortality, hospital admissions, and hand, foot, and mouth disease. Several studies identified low temperature impacts on infant mortality and episodes of respiratory disease. Findings on temperature risks for sudden infant death syndrome were inconsistent. Only five studies were conducted in low- or middle-income countries, and evidence on subpopulations and temperature-sensitive infectious diseases was limited. Public health measures are required to reduce the impacts of heat and cold on infant health.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/ijerph19159109
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subjects Ambient temperature
Babies
Bias
Blood
Child
Climate change
Cold Temperature
Communicable Diseases
Hand-foot-and-mouth disease
Health risks
Humans
Infant
Infant Health
Infant mortality
Infant, Newborn
Infants
Infectious diseases
Jaundice
Low temperature
Morbidity
Neonates
Physiological effects
Physiology
Public health
Respiratory diseases
Respiratory Tract Diseases
Review
Rural areas
SIDS
Social factors
Socioeconomic factors
Subpopulations
Sudden Infant Death
Sudden infant death syndrome
Systematic review
Temperature
Temperature requirements
title The Effect of High and Low Ambient Temperature on Infant Health: A Systematic Review
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