Author(s): Chloe Brimicombe

Four surprising ways climate change is affecting people’s health in England and Wales

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When you take age out of the equation, temperature-related deaths are on the decline in England and Wales. That’s according to the  from the Office for National Statistics (ONS). But more people are going to hospital, compared with 20 years ago.

It turns out, that’s not the only surprise in this new report. Here’s how else climate change is affecting health in Britain.

1. Deaths during heatwaves are increasing

By reporting the number of climate-related deaths per 100,000 people for each age cohort, the study effectively hid the influence of age, making factors like temperature easier to compare over time. 

Looking at the  instead tells us how deaths linked to a certain cause – such as heart disease or road traffic accidents – have increased compared with the average death rate over the last five years. Using this measure reveals that  of all causes have increased in Britain during heatwaves since 2001, especially among people over 65. 

Despite this, the weighted death rate is lower today than two decades ago, perhaps because of better  and an  more generally. 

2. Respiratory deaths up on hot and cold days

Deaths from respiratory diseases have increased on cold days as well as warm ones since 2001 according to the ONS report. 

One reason for this may be that these weather conditions are often associated with higher levels of air pollution. The wood-burning stoves some homes use during colder weather are now a bigger source of  (38%) than road traffic in the UK.

 in the atmosphere often give rise to clear skies and lots of sunshine which can cause . The air pressure systems causing this also allow pollution to accumulate overhead as the air  â€“ exacerbating respiratory illnesses. 

3. Drowning is a leading cause of death on hot days

More people died from drowning on hot days than of heat stroke annually between 2001 and 2020. There were around 22 extra  in summer 2020 compared with 2001 in England and Wales. And despite a fall in the overall number of people dying , there has been an uptick since 2019.

Many of these cases may involve people who bathed in rivers or the sea to escape the heat. Jumping into cold water when your body is hot can cause it to , and drowning is a  in the UK. More people died as a result of recreational swimming in the last 20 years than flooding. 

The increasing popularity of wild swimming may be responsible, and should prompt better information on rivers and beaches to alert people .

4. Warm weather is raising hospital admissions

The number of hospital patients admitted during cold weather has fallen over the last 20 years as winters in the UK have become milder. This is despite winter months being known as the busiest for hospitals. In comparison, the number of people admitted with a condition related to high temperatures, such as heat stroke in warm weather has increased by 12,086 a year on average for the past decade. 

There were 2,325 more patients admitted for mental health treatment in the warmest four months of the year (June, July, August and September) in 2018 compared with when the records began in 2010 in England as well. Heatwaves tend to , as our bodies produce more of the stress hormone cortisol in extreme heat. But this finding alone is not enough to indicate a trend of increasing hospitalisations for mental health treatment since 2010.

 was a leading cause of hospital admissions up to 2018 and around 800 more people were admitted to hospital due to dehydration on average in England in 2018 compared with a decade earlier in 2010. However, the report does not indicate an increasing trend since 2010.

Climate change will become a bigger influence on human health in  in the future. This report suggests that the health consequences of Britain’s climate warming have been relatively mild so far. But that is not a cause for complacency.

The Conversation

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