Patricia Matus Correa

ORCID: 0000-0003-1844-6564
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Climate Change and Health Impacts
  • Air Quality and Health Impacts
  • Global Health Care Issues
  • Health disparities and outcomes
  • Thermoregulation and physiological responses
  • COVID-19 epidemiological studies
  • COVID-19 impact on air quality
  • Energy and Environment Impacts
  • Water Resource Management and Quality
  • Air Quality Monitoring and Forecasting
  • Atmospheric chemistry and aerosols
  • COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts
  • Occupational Health and Safety in Workplaces
  • Environmental and Social Impact Assessments
  • Nutrition and Health in Aging
  • Effects of Environmental Stressors on Livestock
  • Multiple and Secondary Primary Cancers
  • Global Maternal and Child Health
  • Economic and Financial Impacts of Cancer
  • Advances in Oncology and Radiotherapy
  • Genetic factors in colorectal cancer
  • Cytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research
  • Electroconvulsive Therapy Studies
  • Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics
  • Chronic Disease Management Strategies

Universidad de Los Andes, Chile
2013-2024

Ewha Womans University
2024

Universidad Pablo de Olavide
2024

Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
2024

National Institute for Environmental Studies
2024

Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
2024

Monash University
2024

Research Network (United States)
2021

Shanghai Children's Medical Center
2021

Shanghai Jiao Tong University
2021

The systematic evaluation of the results time-series studies air pollution is challenged by differences in model specification and publication bias.We evaluated associations inhalable particulate matter (PM) with an aerodynamic diameter 10 μm or less (PM10) fine PM 2.5 (PM2.5) daily all-cause, cardiovascular, respiratory mortality across multiple countries regions. Daily data on were collected from 652 cities 24 We used overdispersed generalized additive models random-effects meta-analysis...

10.1056/nejmoa1817364 article EN New England Journal of Medicine 2019-08-21

Climate change can directly affect human health by varying exposure to non-optimal outdoor temperature. However, evidence on this direct impact at a global scale is limited, mainly due issues in modelling and projecting complex highly heterogeneous epidemiological relationships across different populations climates.We collected observed daily time series of mean temperature mortality counts for all causes or non-external only, periods ranging from Jan 1, 1984, Dec 31, 2015, various locations...

10.1016/s2542-5196(17)30156-0 article EN cc-by The Lancet Planetary Health 2017-11-14

BackgroundExposure to cold or hot temperatures is associated with premature deaths. We aimed evaluate the global, regional, and national mortality burden non-optimal ambient temperatures.MethodsIn this modelling study, we collected time-series data on from 750 locations in 43 countries five meta-predictors at a grid size of 0·5° × across globe. A three-stage analysis strategy was used. First, temperature–mortality association fitted for each location by use regression. Second, multivariate...

10.1016/s2542-5196(21)00081-4 article EN cc-by The Lancet Planetary Health 2021-07-01

Background Heatwaves are a critical public health problem. There will be an increase in the frequency and severity of heatwaves under changing climate. However, evidence about impacts climate change on heatwave-related mortality at global scale is limited. Methods findings We collected historical daily time series mean temperature for all causes or nonexternal causes, periods ranging from January 1, 1984, to December 31, 2015, 412 communities within 20 countries/regions. estimated...

10.1371/journal.pmed.1002629 article EN cc-by PLoS Medicine 2018-07-31

The health burden associated with temperature is expected to increase due a warming climate. Populations living in cities are likely be particularly at risk, but the role of urban characteristics modifying direct effects on still unclear. In this contribution, we used multi-country dataset study effect modification temperature-mortality relationships by range city-specific indicators.We collected ambient and mortality daily time-series data for 340 22 countries, periods between 1985 2014....

10.1093/ije/dyz008 article EN International Journal of Epidemiology 2019-02-25

Abstract Objective To evaluate the short term associations between nitrogen dioxide (NO 2 ) and total, cardiovascular, respiratory mortality across multiple countries/regions worldwide, using a uniform analytical protocol. Design Two stage, time series approach, with overdispersed generalised linear models multilevel meta-analysis. Setting 398 cities in 22 low to high income countries/regions. Main outcome measures Daily deaths from total (62.8 million), cardiovascular (19.7 (5.5 million)...

10.1136/bmj.n534 article EN cc-by-nc BMJ 2021-03-24

Background: There is strong experimental evidence that physiologic stress from high temperatures greater if humidity higher. However, heat indices developed to allow for this have not consistently predicted mortality better than dry-bulb temperature. Objectives: We aimed clarify the potential contribution of an addition temperature in predicting daily summer by using a large multicountry dataset. Methods: In 445 cities 24 countries, we fit time-series regression model with distributed lag...

10.1289/ehp5430 article EN public-domain Environmental Health Perspectives 2019-09-01

Abstract Epidemiological analyses of health risks associated with non-optimal temperature are traditionally based on ground observations from weather stations that offer limited spatial and temporal coverage. Climate reanalysis represents an alternative option provide complete spatio-temporal exposure coverage, yet to be systematically explored for their suitability in assessing temperature-related at a global scale. Here we the first comprehensive analysis over multiple regions assess most...

10.1038/s41598-022-09049-4 article EN cc-by Scientific Reports 2022-03-25

Older adults are generally amongst the most vulnerable to heat and cold. While temperature-related health impacts projected increase with global warming, influence of population aging on these trends remains unclear. Here we show that at 1.5 °C, 2 3 °C heat-related mortality in 800 locations across 50 countries/areas will by 0.5%, 1.0%, 2.5%, respectively; among which 1 5 4 deaths can be attributed aging. Despite a decrease cold-related due progressive warming alone, mostly counteract this...

10.1038/s41467-024-45901-z article EN cc-by Nature Communications 2024-02-27

The Paris Agreement binds all nations to undertake ambitious efforts combat climate change, with the commitment "hold warming well below 2 °C in global mean temperature (GMT), relative pre-industrial levels, and pursue limit 1.5 °C". constitutes an goal for which greater evidence on its benefits health would help guide policy potentially increase motivation action. Here we contribute this gap assessment potential benefits, terms of reductions temperature-related mortality, derived from...

10.1007/s10584-018-2274-3 article EN cc-by Climatic Change 2018-09-10
Francesco Sera Ben Armstrong Sam Abbott Sophie Meakin Kathleen O’Reilly and 93 more Rosa von Borries Rochelle Schneider Dominic Royé Masahiro Hashizume Mathilde Pascal Aurelio Tobı́as Ana M. Vicedo–Cabrera Wenbiao Hu Shilu Tong Éric Lavigne Patricia Matus Correa Xia Meng Haidong Kan Jan Kynčl Aleš Urban Hans Orru Niilo Ryti Jouni J. K. Jaakkola Simon Cauchemez Marco Dallavalle Alexandra Schneider Ariana Zeka Yasushi Honda Chris Fook Sheng Ng Barrak Alahmad Shilpa Rao Francesco Di Ruscio Gabriel Carrasco-Escobar Xerxes Seposo Iulian‐Horia Holobâcă Ho Kim Whanhee Lee Carmen Íñiguez Martina S. Ragettli Alicia Alemán Valentina Colistro Michelle L. Bell Antonella Zanobetti Joel Schwartz Trần Ngọc Đăng Noah Scovronick Micheline de Sousa Zanotti Stagliorio Coêlho Magali Hurtado‐Díaz Yuzhou Zhang Timothy Russell Mihály Koltai Adam J. Kucharski Rosanna C. Barnard Matthew Quaife Christopher I Jarvis Jiayao Lei James D. Munday Y. Chan Billy J. Quilty Rosalind M. Eggo Stefan Flasche Anna M. Foss Samuel Clifford Damien C. Tully W. John Edmunds Petra Klepac Oliver J. Brady Fabienne Krauer Simon R. Procter Thibaut Jombart Alicia Roselló Alicia Showering Sebastian Funk Joel Hellewell Fiona Yueqian Sun Akira Endo Jack Williams Amy Gimma Naomi R. Waterlow Kiesha Prem Nikos I Bosse Hamish Gibbs Katherine E. Atkins Carl A. B. Pearson Yalda Jafari Christian Julián Villabona‐Arenas Mark Jit Emily Nightingale Nicholas G. Davies Kevin van Zandvoort Yang Liu Frank Sandmann William Waites Kaja Abbas Graham F. Medley Gwenan M. Knight Antonio Gasparrini Rachel Lowe

Abstract There is conflicting evidence on the influence of weather COVID-19 transmission. Our aim to estimate weather-dependent signatures in early phase pandemic, while controlling for socio-economic factors and non-pharmaceutical interventions. We identify a modest non-linear association between mean temperature effective reproduction number (R e ) 409 cities 26 countries, with decrease 0.087 (95% CI: 0.025; 0.148) 10 °C increase. Early interventions have greater effect R 0.285 CI 0.223;...

10.1038/s41467-021-25914-8 article EN cc-by Nature Communications 2021-10-13

Background: The association between fine particulate matter (PM 2.5 ) and mortality widely differs as well within countries. Differences in PM composition can play a role modifying the effect estimates, but there is little evidence about which components have higher impacts on mortality. Methods: We applied 2-stage analysis data collected from 210 locations 16 In first stage, we estimated location-specific relative risks (RR) for associated with daily total through time series regression...

10.1097/ede.0000000000001455 article EN Epidemiology 2021-12-07

Minimum mortality temperature (MMT) is an important indicator to assess the temperature-mortality association, indicating long-term adaptation local climate. Limited evidence about geographical variability of MMT available at a global scale.We collected data from 658 communities in 43 countries under different climates. We estimated associations derive for each community using Poisson regression with distributed lag nonlinear models. investigated variation by climatic zone mixed-effects...

10.1097/ee9.0000000000000169 article EN cc-by-nc-nd Environmental Epidemiology 2021-09-24

BackgroundIncreased mortality risk is associated with short-term temperature variability. However, to our knowledge, there has been no comprehensive assessment of the variability-related burden worldwide. In this study, using data from MCC Collaborative Research Network, we first explored association between variability and across 43 countries or regions. Then, provide a more picture global variability, gridded resolution 0·5° × were used assess at global, regional, national levels....

10.1016/s2542-5196(22)00073-0 article EN cc-by The Lancet Planetary Health 2022-05-01

BackgroundClimate change can directly impact temperature-related excess deaths and might subsequently the seasonal variation in mortality. In this study, we aimed to provide a systematic comprehensive assessment of potential future changes variation, or seasonality, mortality across different climate zones.MethodsIn modelling collected daily time series mean temperature (all causes non-external only) via Multi-Country Multi-City Collaborative (MCC) Research Network. These data were during...

10.1016/s2542-5196(23)00269-3 article EN cc-by-nc-nd The Lancet Planetary Health 2024-02-01

10.1016/j.jacc.2024.03.425 article EN Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2024-06-01
Yuan Gao Wenzhong Huang Qi Zhao Niilo Ryti Ben Armstrong and 91 more Antonio Gasparrini Shilu Tong Mathilde Pascal Aleš Urban Ariana Zeka Éric Lavigne Joana Madureira Patrick Goodman Veronika Huber Bertil Forsberg Jan Kyselý Francesco Sera Yuming Guo Shanshan Li Yuan Gao Wenzhong Huang Qi Zhao Niilo Ryti Ben Armstrong Antonio Gasparrini Shilu Tong Mathilde Pascal Aleš Urban Ariana Zeka Éric Lavigne Joana Madureira Patrick Goodman Veronika Huber Bertil Forsberg Jan Kyselý Francesco Sera Michelle L. Bell Simon Hales Yasushi Honda Jouni J. K. Jaakkola Aurelio Tobı́as Ana María Vicedo-Cabrera Rosana Abrutzky Micheline de Sousa Zanotti Stagliorio Coêlho Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva Patricia Matus Correa Nicolás Valdés Ortega Haidong Kan Samuel Osorio Dominic Royé Hans Orru Ene Indermitte Alexandra Schneider Klea Katsouyanni Antonis Analitis Hanne Krage Carlsen Fatemeh Mayvaneh Hematollah Roradeh Raanan Raz Paola Michelozzi Francesca de’Donato Masahiro Hashizume Yoonhee Kim Barrak Alahmad John Paul Cauchy Magali Hurtado‐Díaz Eunice Elizabeth Félix Arellano César De la Cruz Valencia Ala Overcenco Danny Houthuijs Caroline Ameling Shilpa Rao Gabriel Carrasco-Escobar Xerxes Seposo Paul Lester Chua Susana das Neves Pereira da Silva Baltazar Nunes Iulian‐Horia Holobâcă Ivana Cvijanović Malcolm Mistry Noah Scovronick Fiorella Acquaotta Ho Kim Whanhee Lee Carmen Íñiguez Christofer Åström Shanshan Li Yue Leon Guo Shih‐Chun Pan Valentina Colistro Antonella Zanobetti Joel Schwartz Trần Ngọc Đăng Do Van Dung Yuming Guo Shanshan Li

BackgroundExposure to cold spells is associated with mortality. However, little known about the global mortality burden of spells.MethodsA three-stage meta-analytical method was used estimate by means a time series dataset 1960 locations across 59 countries (or regions). First, we fitted location-specific, spell-related associations using quasi-Poisson regression distributed lag non-linear model period up 21 days. Second, built multivariate meta-regression between location-specific and seven...

10.1016/s2542-5196(23)00277-2 article EN cc-by-nc-nd The Lancet Planetary Health 2024-02-01

Assessing the association between temperature frequency and mortality can provide insights into human adaptation to local ambient temperatures. We collected daily time-series data on from 757 locations in 43 countries during 1979–2020. used a two-stage time series design assess all-cause mortality. The results were pooled at national, regional, global levels. observed consistent decrease risk of as normalized increases across globe. average increase comparing 10th 100th percentile was 13.03%...

10.1016/j.envint.2024.108691 article EN cc-by Environment International 2024-05-01

Abstract The rising humid heat is regarded as a severe threat to human survivability, but the proper integration of into heat-health alerts still being explored. Using state-of-the-art epidemiological and climatological datasets, we examined association between multiple stress indicators (HSIs) daily mortality in 739 cities worldwide. Notable differences were observed long-term trends timing events detected by HSIs. Air temperature (Tair) predicts heat-related well with robust negative...

10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae290 article EN cc-by-nc PNAS Nexus 2024-07-25
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