rising temperatures impact health

The silent killer lurks in plain sight. Every year, nearly half a million people die from heat-related causes, and nobody seems to notice. Or care. Heat stress has quietly become the leading weather-related killer globally, with Asia and Europe bearing the brunt—45% and 36% of deaths, respectively. The elderly are dropping like flies, with heat mortality among those over 65 skyrocketing by 85% in less than two decades. Europe lost over 61,000 people to heat in summer 2022 alone. Just another season in paradise, right?

Heat: The invisible pandemic we ignore while bodies pile up and thermometers shatter records.

When temperatures spike, health systems buckle. Hospitals face utility failures. Emergency rooms overflow with heatstroke, heart attacks, and gasping lungs. Transportation breaks down. Water becomes scarce. The whole system shows its cracks. And guess who suffers most? The usual suspects: elderly, chronically ill, and poor folks. They always get the short end of the thermometer.

It’s not just immediate deaths that matter. Heat makes everything worse. Heart disease? Worse. Diabetes? Worse. Mental health? Tanking. Medications don’t work right when you’re cooking from the inside out. Some research even shows extreme heat speeds up biological aging. Scientists have discovered that prolonged exposure to high temperatures actually modifies gene behavior, accelerating the aging process in affected populations. Fantastic news for everyone with pre-existing conditions!

The geography of suffering isn’t equal either. Central Asia recently baked under temperatures 10°C above normal. People in crowded urban apartments without AC might as well be sitting in ovens. Even more alarming, those in informal settlements endure temperatures significantly higher than other urban areas due to their building materials. Developing regions lack even basic heat warning systems. Must be nice to live somewhere with functioning infrastructure.

The economic toll is staggering. By 2030, we’re looking at $2.4 trillion in productivity losses annually. Workers can’t function in sweltering heat. Construction slows. Agriculture suffers. Healthcare costs explode. Just like air pollution, which costs the global economy $8.1 trillion yearly in health impacts, heat’s financial burden compounds the suffering. The economy takes a hit while people take their last breaths.

And infectious diseases? They’re loving the heat wave party. Higher temperatures mean more transmission. Water supplies get compromised. Power outages mean no refrigeration. It’s a cascading nightmare that nobody’s prepared for.

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