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A City Under Heat: Assessing urban heat island impacts on mortality risk from non-communicable diseases in metropolitan zones of Mexico, 2003-2019

A City Under Heat: Assessing urban heat island impacts on mortality risk from non-communicable diseases in metropolitan zones of Mexico, 2003-2019

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Authors

Constantino González Salazar, Andrea Guadalupe Velázquez-Cisneros 

Abstract

Urban heat island (UHI) has been recognized as a serious health threat in urban cities worldwide, which can contribute to thermal discomfort, and a range of morbidity and mortality outcomes. Using mortality records for five International Classification of Diseases chapters (4, 5, 6, 9, and 10) from 2003–2019 across metropolitan regions in Mexico, and summer and winter daytime/nighttime UHI intensity, we assessed the association between UHI intensity and non-communicable disease mortality, stratified by climatic zone, sex, and age group. Results show that UHI intensity varied across climatic contexts, reaching up to 6 °C in temperate regions, where the strongest associations with mortality were also detected. Nighttime UHI during summer emerged as a critical driver of risk, with significant associations observed even at 1 °C increments. Vulnerability extended beyond the elderly, with consistent associations among children, adolescents, and women of reproductive age, highlighting overlooked groups at risk. These findings reveal that UHI effects are heterogeneous across seasons, regions, and demographics, and underscore the urgency of integrating UHI mitigation into climate adaptation and public health strategies to prevent the amplification of health inequities under future warming.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.31223/X56N0T

Subjects

Public Health

Keywords

Urban Heat Island, Non-communicable diseases, Mortality risk, Spatial epidemiology, vulnerability

Dates

Published: 2025-10-11 09:37

Last Updated: 2025-10-11 09:37

License

CC BY Attribution 4.0 International

Additional Metadata

Data Availability (Reason not available):
The original data presented in the study are openly available in the General Directorate of Epidemiology repository, [http://www.dgis.salud.gob.mx/contenidos/ basesdedatos/da_defunciones_gobmx.html, accessed on 17 November 2024]

Conflict of interest statement:
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.