Litcius/Paper detail

Decreasing human body temperature in the United States since the Industrial Revolution

Myroslava Protsiv, Catherine Ley, Joanna Lankester, Trevor Hastie, Julie Parsonnet

2020eLife155 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

century. We postulated that body temperature has decreased over time. Using measurements from three cohorts--the Union Army Veterans of the Civil War (N = 23,710; measurement years 1860-1940), the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey I (N = 15,301; 1971-1975), and the Stanford Translational Research Integrated Database Environment (N = 150,280; 2007-2017)--we determined that mean body temperature in men and women, after adjusting for age, height, weight and, in some models date and time of day, has decreased monotonically by 0.03°C per birth decade. A similar decline within the Union Army cohort as between cohorts, makes measurement error an unlikely explanation. This substantive and continuing shift in body temperature-a marker for metabolic rate-provides a framework for understanding changes in human health and longevity over 157 years.

Topics & Concepts

DemographyLongevityCohortSoviet unionBody weightGerontologyMedicinePolitical scienceEndocrinologySociologyLawInternal medicinePoliticsThermoregulation and physiological responsesClimate Change and Health ImpactsDiet and metabolism studies