Western heat wave threatens health in vulnerable communities

by Joseph K. Clark

PHOENIX — Extreme temperatures like those blistering the American West this week aren’t just annoying. They’re deadly.

Scientists and doctors said that people, plants, and animals need cooler temperatures at night to recover from high heat stress. But with overnight temperatures in the 90s, that’s not happening.

Karuppana noted that many people she sees might have no car and take public transportation in the Phoenix heat, walking through neighborhoods with few trees and waiting at bus and light rail stops with no shade. Some people live in poorly ventilated mobile homes or without air conditioning. Or they may work outside in the sun as construction workers or landscapers.

health

Phoenix has been baking in temperatures above 115 degrees (46 Celsius) all week. The high Friday hit a record 117 degrees (47 Celsius) after breaking another Thursday at 118 degrees (48 Celsius). Daily records also were set this week in places across the U.S. West, such as Nevada and California, including 128 degrees (53 Celsius) in Death Valley on Thursday.

Those vulnerable to high temperatures include the very young, the very old, and people with heart or kidney disease, ailments that disproportionately affect communities of color.

“We are activated for Phoenix and monitoring it closely,” said Nicolette Louissaint, executive director of the Washington nonprofit Healthcare Ready, founded after Hurricane Katrina to help communities deal with natural disasters.

Louissaint said her organization has helped in heat emergencies by funding cooling centers that offer bottled water and shade or arranging transportation for older people without cars who need dialysis or heart checkups.

“Extreme heat exacerbates serious medical conditions,” she said. “It’s tough on people who don’t have much money.” Phoenix and other local governments around the Southwest remind people on social media to drink lots of water, stay out of the sun if possible and take frequent breaks on hot days. They warn people not to leave children or pets in vehicles, and they work with nonprofits like the Salvation Army to open facilities that allow people to cool off.

The rising risks of the heat became painfully clear three years ago when 72-year-old Stephanie Pullman died at her Phoenix-area home after Arizona’s largest electric utility turned off her service for failure to pay $51. A coroner listed “environmental heat exposure” as one of the causes of her 2018 death.

It led to a series of moratoriums on overdue electrical bills in Arizona that continued through the end of last year amid the coronavirus pandemic. The utility, Arizona Public Service, says it has suspended service disconnections and waived late fees through Oct. 15. The county, including Phoenix, has reported three heat-related deaths as of Saturday, with an additional 20 fatalities being investigated as possibly caused by high temperatures.

Heat-related deaths in Maricopa County have been rising dramatically in recent years, with 323 reported last year, the highest ever recorded. About 80% of those who died were men. The highest rates were reported among Black people and Native Americans.

People living on the street are especially at risk. The Maricopa County medical examiner had said the heat was a primary or secondary cause in the death of 146 homeless people last year when the summer was the hottest ever recorded in Phoenix.

Scientists say the number of heat deaths in the U.S. West and worldwide was only expected to rise. As average temperatures rise worldwide, heat is becoming more extreme, Gerald Meehl, senior scientist with the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado.

“As the average climate warms from increasing human-produced greenhouse gases, we are seeing more intense, more frequent, and longer-lasting heat waves,” Meehl said.

Last month’s study estimated the number of heat deaths each year that can be attributed to human-caused global warming. It included about 200 U.S. cities and found more than 1,100 deaths a year from climate change-caused heat, many in the East and Midwest, where many people don’t have air conditioning or are not acclimated to hot weather.

Joellen Russell, a climate science professor at the University of Arizona in Tucson, said the Southwest is an early example of what will hit the rest of the nation later regarding the dangers of heat extremes caused by global warming.

“I think we’d better hurry up,” she said. “Our kids are counting on us.” Associated Press Science Writer Seth Borenstein contributed from Washington. Follow Snow on Twitter at https://twitter.com/asnowreports and Borenstein at https://twitter.com/borenbears.

Related Posts