https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-06/buso-hmk061920.php
News Release 19-Jun-2020
Boston University School of Medicine
Death records point to hundreds of U.S. deaths from heat each year, but even moderately hot weather may actually be killing thousands. This summer, COVID-19 may make it harder to stay cool.
As temperatures rise this summer, a new study by Boston University School of Public Health (BUSPH) and the University of British Columbia School of Population and Public Health (UBC SPPH) researchers finds that thousands of U.S. deaths may be attributable to heat each year, far more than the 600 deaths previously estimated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Published in the journal Environmental Epidemiology, the study estimates that heat contributed to the deaths of 5,600 people each year on average between 1997 and 2006 in 297 counties comprising three-fifths of the U.S. population.
Most of these deaths were from only moderately hot weather, rather than extremely hot weather--categories that the researchers defined not by temperature, but by what temperatures are normal for a given region of the U.S.
"How dangerous a hot day is may depend on where you live," says study lead author Dr. Kate R. Weinberger, assistant professor of occupational and environmental health at UBC SPPH.
"A 90°F day might be dangerous in Seattle, but not in Phoenix," she says. "One of the factors that gives rise to this phenomenon is differing degrees of adaptation to heat. For example, air conditioning is much more common in cities like Phoenix that experience hot weather frequently versus cities like Seattle with cooler climates," Weinberger says, noting that demographic factors can also affect how vulnerable a population is to heat--heat especially endangers older adults, children, pregnant women, and outdoor workers.
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However, the researchers point out that COVID-19 will make it harder to stay cool this summer. "Providing publicly accessible air conditioned spaces on hot days now carries additional risks and requires new protocols for keeping people safe from both heat and infection," Wellenius says.
"At the same time, with many offices, malls, stores, restaurants, and other commercial buildings still largely closed, this summer people are even more reliant on home air conditioning than ever before," he says. "Given the high unemployment rates, particularly among vulnerable communities, we may see an even bigger impact of heat on people's health this summer."
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