Pierre Masselot
@pmasselot.bsky.social
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Assistant professor in Statistics and Environmental Epidemiology. EHM Lab, LSHTM.
Have a look at our study led by the great
@gkonstantinoudis.bsky.social
and
@clairbarnes.bsky.social
.
add a skeleton here at some point
8 days ago
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reposted by
Pierre Masselot
Data & Statistical Science for Health, LSHTM
5 months ago
🎙️ Check out our interview with
@pmasselot.bsky.social
and
@maxeyre.bsky.social
who discuss their recent seminar series focusing on causal inference in environmental epidemiology Read more 🔽
www.lshtm.ac.uk/research/cen...
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With the EHM-Lab, we have put together a website to explore our scientific outputs:
ehm-lab.github.io
. This includes R packages, reproducible analysis code, datasets and interactive apps.
@gasparrini.bsky.social
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EHM-Lab
https://ehm-lab.github.io/
5 months ago
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LSHTM DASH Centre is on Bluesky. We have done a cool seminar series on Causal Inference for Environmental Epidemiology for the Centre so check it out.
add a skeleton here at some point
6 months ago
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We have a new paper presenting methodological extensions for our standard multi-location studies in environmental epidemiology:
doi.org/10.1177/0962...
. This framework has been at the heart of our work on temperature-related mortality health impact assessment and projections in Europe.
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Sage Journals: Discover world-class research
Subscription and open access journals from Sage, the world's leading independent academic publisher.
https://doi.org/10.1177/09622802241313284
8 months ago
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Our new projection study shows a net increase in temperature-related deaths in European cities under all future climate change scenarios. We estimate a death toll potentially exceeding 2 millions by the end of the century without climate change mitigation. Read here:
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
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Estimating future heat-related and cold-related mortality under climate change, demographic and adaptation scenarios in 854 European cities - Nature Medicine
Modeled analyses of 854 European cities show that net temperature-related mortality will increase because of an increase in heat-related mortality exceeding future reductions in cold-related mortality...
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-024-03452-2
8 months ago
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1000th reason on why it's important to reduce GHG emissions: it could literally avoid 100s of thousands of temperature-related deaths. Read our white paper:
t.co/U0Nq36DLuF
over 1 year ago
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Climate change could claim more than 2 million lives until 2100 because of temperature alone. We have made projections of temperature-related mortality in future climate:
www.exhaustion.eu/resources/mo...
over 1 year ago
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