A comparison of methods for calculating population exposure estimates of daily weather for health research
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Date
Authors
Hall, Gillian
Dear, Keith
Hanigan, Ivan
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BioMed Central
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To explain the possible effects of exposure to weather conditions on population
health outcomes, weather data need to be calculated at a level in space and time that is appropriate
for the health data. There are various ways of estimating exposure values from raw data collected
at weather stations but the rationale for using one technique rather than another; the significance
of the difference in the values obtained; and the effect these have on a research question are factors
often not explicitly considered. In this study we compare different techniques for allocating
weather data observations to small geographical areas and different options for weighting averages
of these observations when calculating estimates of daily precipitation and temperature for
Australian Postal Areas. Options that weight observations based on distance from population
centroids and population size are more computationally intensive but give estimates that
conceptually are more closely related to the experience of the population.
RESULTS: Options based on values derived from sites internal to postal areas, or from nearest
neighbour sites – that is, using proximity polygons around weather stations intersected with postal
areas – tended to include fewer stations' observations in their estimates, and missing values were
common. Options based on observations from stations within 50 kilometres radius of centroids
and weighting of data by distance from centroids gave more complete estimates. Using the
geographic centroid of the postal area gave estimates that differed slightly from the population
weighted centroids and the population weighted average of sub-unit estimates.
CONCLUSION: To calculate daily weather exposure values for analysis of health outcome data for
small areas, the use of data from weather stations internal to the area only, or from neighbouring
weather stations (allocated by the use of proximity polygons), is too limited. The most appropriate
method conceptually is the use of weather data from sites within 50 kilometres radius of the area
weighted to population centres, but a simpler acceptable option is to weight to the geographic
centroid.
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Citation
International Journal of Health Geographics 5.38 (2006)
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International Journal of Health Geographics
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Open Access
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