USA: July was hottest on record — and dangerous heat hits home

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By Vijay Limaye, Science Fellow, Science Center

Fueled by climate change, extreme heat is causing more hospitalizations—and even deaths—across the country.

The heat is on. The summer of 2019 has been brutally hot , from the United States to the Netherlands to Japan, and last month was the  since reliable temperature recordkeeping began in 1880.

The science tells us that climate change is fueling  worldwide. Extreme heat clearly isn’t just an inconvenience; exposure can have devastating impacts on our health. And it isn’t just theoretical—it is a present-day threat to well-being.

Teaming up with , the creation of a spotlight on how extreme heat is harming Americans right now happened. Through a recent video created, the focus is on the heat impacts in North Carolina, a state that experiences about 10 dangerously hot days each summer. With unchecked climate change, that number could rise to  every year.

It’s important to stay informed and well hydrated when high temperatures hit. People should always  for the symptoms of heat exhaustion and heat stress. Two health professionals in North Carolina—Kathie Cox, a public health educator in Laurinburg, and Candace Cahoon, a pediatric asthma therapist in Ahoskie—shared their experiences with extreme heat in the video.

As pointed out in the video, extreme heat is taking a serious toll on the health of Americans right now—it’s the  form of extreme weather in the United States. It is estimated that about  each summer are caused by extreme heat exposure in the United States, and about  have to go to the emergency room due to health problems related to extreme heat each year. Those health problems translate into  due to direct treatment costs, lost wages from missed workdays, and the costs of medications and outpatient care—in addition to profound human suffering and significant disruption of daily life.

While extreme heat affects all of us in one way or another, its impacts hit certain vulnerable populations especially hard.  can heighten heat risks to people in cities. For those whose jobs require strenuous outdoor exertion, such as military members, agricultural workers, delivery workers, or construction workers, extreme heat exposure can be a . There are currently gaps in protections for workers related to extreme heat, but last month a bill was introduced in Congress to  the first-ever federal safeguard specific to the health risks of heat.

Extreme heat also harms people with other serious health problems. New research  that people living with kidney disease, diabetes, heart problems, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are significantly more likely to be hospitalized—and more likely to die—after just a single day of exposure to extreme heat.

High temperatures are also known to worsen levels of dangerous , compounding respiratory and cardiovascular health risks. Inhaling dirty air triggers adverse health impacts in people with respiratory ailments like asthma and COPD. Ozone (smog) air pollution levels often spike on the hottest days, elevating risks for the .

Extreme heat is a danger to our health, and it puts the most vulnerable among us at risk of real harm. We have to invest in improved community preparedness so that we can protect vulnerable populations and reduce the public health impacts of extreme heat. Heat adaptation projects can include solutions like , community cooling centers, heat early-warning systems, , and expanded .

The science is clear: Our extreme heat problems  if we fail to cut the carbon pollution that fuels dangerous climate change. It’s time to demand that our political leaders confront the climate crisis.

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Country and region United States of America

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