Publicacións en colaboración con investigadores/as de Universitat de València (32)

2024

  1. A monthly gridded burned area database of national wildland fire data

    Scientific Data

  2. Comparison for the effects of different components of temperature variability on mortality: A multi-country time-series study

    Environment International, Vol. 187

  3. Comparison of Air Pollution-Mortality Associations Using Observed Particulate Matter Concentrations and Reanalysis Data in 33 Spanish Cities

    Environment and Health, Vol. 2, Núm. 3, pp. 161-169

  4. Correction to: Rapid increase in the risk of heat-related mortality (Nature Communications, (2023), 14, 1, (4894), 10.1038/s41467-023-40599-x)

    Nature Communications

  5. Extreme Temperatures and Stroke Mortality: Evidence From a Multi-Country Analysis

    Stroke, Vol. 55, Núm. 7, pp. 1847-1856

  6. Global and Regional Cardiovascular Mortality Attributable to Nonoptimal Temperatures Over Time

    Journal of the American College of Cardiology, Vol. 83, Núm. 23, pp. 2276-2287

  7. Impact of population aging on future temperature-related mortality at different global warming levels

    Nature Communications, Vol. 15, Núm. 1

  8. Rainfall events and daily mortality across 645 global locations: two stage time series analysis

    BMJ (Clinical research ed.), Vol. 387, pp. e080944

  9. Regional variation in the role of humidity on city-level heat-related mortality

    PNAS Nexus, Vol. 3, Núm. 8

  10. Seasonality of mortality under climate change: a multicountry projection study

    The Lancet Planetary Health, Vol. 8, Núm. 2, pp. e86-e94

  11. Temperature frequency and mortality: Assessing adaptation to local temperature

    Environment International, Vol. 187

  12. Temperature-mortality associations by age and cause: a multi-country multi-city study

    ENVIRONMENTAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, Vol. 8, Núm. 5

  13. The Multi-Country Multi-City Collaborative Research Network An international research consortium investigating environment, climate, and health

    Environmental Epidemiology, Vol. 8, Núm. 5, pp. e339