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Monte Carlo simulation-based estimation for the minimum mortality temperature in temperature-mortality association study

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2017

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BioMed Central
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Lee, Whanhee, Ho Kim, Sunghee Hwang, Antonella Zanobetti, Joel D. Schwartz, and Yeonseung Chung. 2017. “Monte Carlo simulation-based estimation for the minimum mortality temperature in temperature-mortality association study.” BMC Medical Research Methodology 17 (1): 137. doi:10.1186/s12874-017-0412-7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12874-017-0412-7.

Abstract

Background: Rich literature has reported that there exists a nonlinear association between temperature and mortality. One important feature in the temperature-mortality association is the minimum mortality temperature (MMT). The commonly used approach for estimating the MMT is to determine the MMT as the temperature at which mortality is minimized in the estimated temperature-mortality association curve. Also, an approximate bootstrap approach was proposed to calculate the standard errors and the confidence interval for the MMT. However, the statistical properties of these methods were not fully studied. Methods: Our research assessed the statistical properties of the previously proposed methods in various types of the temperature-mortality association. We also suggested an alternative approach to provide a point and an interval estimates for the MMT, which improve upon the previous approach if some prior knowledge is available on the MMT. We compare the previous and alternative methods through a simulation study and an application. In addition, as the MMT is often used as a reference temperature to calculate the cold- and heat-related relative risk (RR), we examined how the uncertainty in the MMT affects the estimation of the RRs. Results: The previously proposed method of estimating the MMT as a point (indicated as Argmin2) may increase bias or mean squared error in some types of temperature-mortality association. The approximate bootstrap method to calculate the confidence interval (indicated as Empirical1) performs properly achieving near 95% coverage but the length can be unnecessarily extremely large in some types of the association. We showed that an alternative approach (indicated as Empirical2), which can be applied if some prior knowledge is available on the MMT, works better reducing the bias and the mean squared error in point estimation and achieving near 95% coverage while shortening the length of the interval estimates. Conclusions: The Monte Carlo simulation-based approach to estimate the MMT either as a point or as an interval was shown to perform well particularly when some prior knowledge is incorporated to reduce the uncertainty. The MMT uncertainty also can affect the estimation for the MMT-referenced RR and ignoring the MMT uncertainty in the RR estimation may lead to invalid results with respect to the bias in point estimation and the coverage in interval estimation. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1186/s12874-017-0412-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

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Minimum mortality temperature, Point and interval estimation, Monte Carlo simulation-based estimation

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