The media has been reporting that 37% “of warm-season heat-related deaths can be attributed to anthropogenic climate change.”
They gleaned this from the peer-reviewed paper, “The burden of heat-related mortality attributable to recent human-induced climate change”, in Nature Climate Change by Vicedo-Cabrera and a slew of others (opening quote from the Abstract).
The abstract opens with this true statement: “Climate change affects human health”. Every year when winter rolls in, deaths rise, peaking sometime in January in the Northern Hemisphere.
Deaths begin falling in spring, falling to a low when the hot summer winds start blowing. Here, for example, are the official CDC all-cause weekly deaths, starting late 2009 and going through May of 2021. Flu and pneumonia and COVID deaths are also plotted.
In Florida and Arizona in winter, the snowbirds arrive from Michigan, Ohio, Canada, and other points north. These people are fleeing the cold weather, seeking out the heat. On purpose. They do this not in anticipation the hotter weather will kill them but will cure or sustain them.
Yet despite all this, the authors say heat due to global warming is killing people and killing a lot of people.
Before we get to how the authors came to that “37%,” let’s think about how to best know whether or not deaths were caused by heat, both now and in the absence of any so-called global warming. Then we’ll see how close the authors came to this ideal approach.
To properly measure deaths caused by heat, we’d search death records for those deaths in which heat is mentioned as at least a contributing cause, and investigate the circumstances. The authors did not do this.
Perhaps it’s difficult to know whether any death was caused by heat, that information not being present in many charts.
But we might be able to create a per-person model of heat-caused deaths using inputs like temperature and person characteristics (hypertension, weight, dehydration, etc.). For each person in the death database, we’d have a probability that their death was associated with heat.
The authors did not do this.
Neither did they compute, as a comparison, a second per-person probability of death-by-heat for temperatures different than the actual temperatures. Call this a counterfactual temperature, chosen to be that value the temperature might have been absent global warming.
And they did not multiply the heat-death probability they did not compute by the different probability that the counterfactual temperature was the correct temperature absent global warming. After all, the counterfactual temperature is only a guess and we have to account for its uncertainty.
Again, the authors did none of this.
The weakest, least convincing, and even wrong approach would be to correlate daily deaths and daily temperatures. Everybody knows (or claims they know) correlation does not equal causation.
To imply causation by correlation is therefore wrong. It is wrong because the correlation may be spurious, misleading, and so on.
It is also wrong because we would have the strongest correlation in winter, and we’d conclude cold causes more deaths because of the strong correlation between lower temperatures and higher deaths.
Curiously, the authors limited their view to the “warmest four consecutive months in each location” and ignored times when deaths peak.
There is still one more uncertainty to account for, which the authors did not. This is a subtly of the heat-caused death model mentioned earlier.
Low and high temperatures kill some people. But the number of direct temperature-caused deaths (e.g. frostbite, sunstroke) is low. At best, then, we’re dealing with the temperature being an indirect cause.
That means there is uncertainty in how strong a cause, in the long causal chains, of actual deaths [from] temperature is.
In order to make such a strong claim that 37% of heat-related deaths are attributable to global warming, the authors must have hit upon an irreproachable set of data and methods to identify these myriad causes.
Or they made an enormous mistake.
I’m next going to explain their approach using a minimal amount of detail: the full explanation is maddening (feel free to look it up and check me).
They went with the weakest and wrong, correlation-is-causation, approach. They did not use the actual daily temperatures and daily death counts (from either all-causes or only all non-external causes, freely mixing the two codes).
Instead, they substituted a model of daily temperatures (“historical climate simulations”), using the actual temperatures to sometimes modify this model for “bias”.
They did not account for the uncertainty inherent in the temperature substitution. This means, even if everything else is right, their results will be too certain.
For the counterfactual temperatures, they also used a model. They did not account for the uncertainty this counterfactual model was right. Again, their results would be too certain.
To correlate (something like) deaths with the two models, they used a third model (“a quasi-Poisson regression” which has certain parameters). The model was not just for today’s modeled temperature and today’s death, but they allowed for “a predefined lag period” in the two.
This appears to be 10 days before any death. To account for this lag, they used two more models (two splines, one for seasonality).
Naturally, they did not account for the uncertainties in these two models, nor of the arbitrary, and what seems awfully long, 10-day period. The longer the time period, the more “associated” deaths they would identify.
All of these models have parameters, also called coefficients. Ordinarily, we’d be interested in the observables, and not the unobservable innards (coefficients) of any model. See this for why.
The gist is that certainty in the coefficients is always greater than certainty in the observables. Meaning any results which speak of observables(heat deaths) but which report what happened to coefficients are over-certain.
Anyway, the coefficients from this first stage of models were then inputted into regressions along with “country-level gross domestic product, location-specific average temperature and interquartile range and indicators of climatic classification”.
Gross domestic product is causative of heat deaths?
You’ll be tired of hearing it, but the uncertainty in the observables due to these regressions was not accounted for.
Read rest at William M. Briggs
Just one other reason i quit watching the Fake news and quit reading their Newspapers all the told us were Lies
From the article, “Instead, they substituted a model of daily temperatures.” Any legitimate researcher will always use real data over that of a model. Substitution of data from a model is a red flag that the research is politically motivated junk science and is fairly common in the area of climate change. In addition to ignoring real data, the researcher ignored common sense. Global warming has been just one degree. Do they really expect us to believe that such a small increase in temperature is causing a large number of deaths?
The climate change movement is attempting “rapid, far-reaching and unprecedented changes in all aspects of society.” This includes dramatic increases in the cost of electricity, gas, and diesel. Black outs would become common. High energy prices would cause everything else to become more expensive especially food. The only way the average family could have a car is to keep vehicles running that would normally end up in a junk yard. To justify the goals of the climate change movement, we have a tsunami of junk science studies.
More reasons to turn off and tune out the M.S. Media 99/44&100% of the News we get is Fake News Broadcast or Print
There are no legitimate death certificates indicating death by climate change.
Where are the models of climate change catastrophism killing children through an increased suicide risk?
In the Lockdown State of Victoria it is even worse. Here, we have a dose of extreme Covid catastrophism grafted on top of years of schooling in which children are routinely told that the planet is dying and that people are utterly responsible. The mental health toll of either on vulnerable children is frightening. Together it makes for a perfect storm of psychological abuse.
Teaching children to care for conservation is one thing. Teaching them eco-self-loathing is another matter entirely.
We must vaccinate our children with regular doses of common sense from an early age, lest they give in to this politically manufactured despair.