4.5 Article

Comparison of health outcomes from heat-related injuries by National Weather Service reported heat wave days and non-heat wave days - Illinois, 2013-2019

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOMETEOROLOGY
Volume 66, Issue 3, Pages 641-645

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00484-021-02218-6

Keywords

Climate change; Injury; Extreme heat events; Heat wave; Heat stroke

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As climate changes, heat waves are predicted to increase and public health interventions related to heat need to be strengthened to reduce injuries. Despite the higher rate of heat injuries on heat wave days, only a small portion of heat injuries occur during reported heat waves.
It is predicted that heat waves will increase as climate changes. Related public health interventions have expanded over the past decades but are primarily targeted at health outcomes occurring during heat waves. However, heat adaptation is dynamic and adverse outcomes related to heat injuries occur with moderate increases in temperature throughout the summertime. We analyzed outpatient and inpatient heat related injuries from 2013 to 2019. National Weather Service event summaries were used to characterize reported heat wave days and weather data was linked to individual cases. Despite the higher rate of heat injury on heat wave days, only 12.7% of the 17,662 heat-related injuries diagnosed from 2013 to 2019 occurred during reported heat waves. In addition, the National Weather Service surveillance system monitoring heat related injuries only captured 2.1% of all heat related injuries and 30.6% of heat related deaths. As climate changes and warmer conditions become more common, public health response to moderate increases in temperature during summertime needs to be strengthened as do the surveillance systems used to monitor adverse heat related health events. Improved surveillance systems, long-term interventions and strategies addressing climate change may help mitigate adverse health outcomes attributable to heat related injuries over the summertime.

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