Fig 1.
Exposure-response curve and 95% confidence interval for the association between heat and mortality risk in the total population in Connecticut from 2005 to 2016 with a same-day lag effect.
Fig 2.
Exposure-response curves and 95% confidence intervals for the association between heat and mortality risk in males vs. females in Connecticut from 2005–2016 with a same-day lag effect.
Fig 3.
Exposure-response curves and 95% confidence intervals for the association between heat and mortality risk in people 65 and older vs. people under 65 in Connecticut from 2005–2016 with a same-day lag effect.
Table 1.
Attributable fractions (AFs), attributable numbers (ANs), and empirical confidence intervals (eCIs) of deaths attributable to heat and extreme heat at the 90th and 99th percentiles in the total population and all subgroups.