In Europe, 71,000 people died during the 2003 heat wave, with over 2000 of these excess deaths in England and Wales. For every 1°C above 23.3°C, an extra 75 deaths per week are estimated in the UK according to a Public Health England (PHE) report in 2015. Last year was the third consecutive warmest year since records began and as the earth’s climate is warming with the frequency, intensity and duration of heatwaves increasing, this presents a significant health risk to vulnerable populations such as the elderly, children, the chronically ill and those with heat sensitivity.
and (PhD student), both from the university’s Environmental Extremes Laboratory, presented at PHE’s Annual Heatwave Seminar on 14 March 2017 that reviewed the in an attempt to reduce the number of deaths, reduce illness and hospital visits and increase public awareness. The seminar hosted delegates and speakers from PHE, NHS, Met Office, national climate change committees and charities, as well as regional council public health departments and universities from around the country. International representation also came from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Neil’s presentation alerted the audience to
With PHE estimating physical inactivity to cost the NHS in England more than £450m a year, discouraging people to exercise as soon as the weather turns hot is not the right message.
Kirsty’s presentation continued this theme, by presenting data she had recently collected that will lead to the
development of an elderly-specific guide for assessing heat illness risk in the UK during exercise-heat stress.
A novel finding from her research is that there is a mismatch between how hot the elderly get during exercise and how hot they think they are. Therefore, the elderly may be perceptually less aware of the dangers of hot weather and increase their risk of experiencing a heat-related illness.
The key message to both Neil and Kirsty’s presentations was to ensure that safe exercise is carried out during periods of hot weather and more research needs to examine practical heat-alleviating approaches that can be used by more vulnerable populations.
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