Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Body count grows as weather clears, especially in Texas

Victims of frigid conditions include 11-year-old boy who died in his bed

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

DALLAS — With the snow and ice clearing in Texas after days of unusually low temperatur­es, bodies are being found of people who probably froze to death as they struggled to stay warm after electricit­y was cut to millions of homes.

Of the roughly 70 deaths attributed to the snow, ice and frigid weather nationwide, more than a dozen were people who perished in homes that had lost heat, and most of those were in Texas. They include an 11-year-old boy who died in his bed in Conroe, near Houston, and at least six people in Taylor County.

Taylor County Sheriff Ricky Bishop said his office received many calls in recent days asking for checks on friends or family members struggling during the power outages.

“I can think of probably one point in one hour we probably got 10 of those calls,” said Bishop, adding that some of the county’s roads were covered in snowdrifts up to 4 feet deep.

Of the six people who died in Taylor County last week, three were in the city of Abilene.

Abilene Fire Chief Cande Flores said a homeless 67-year-old man died Monday. Two other people died Wednesday, including a man found dead in his bed. Flores said the freezing temperatur­e in the man’s house was the same as outside. The man’s wife was hospitaliz­ed.

Another man died at a health care facility after a lack of water pressure made medical treatment impossible.

Outside Abilene in Taylor County, one person in Tuscola and two in Buffalo Gap died in the cold. Bishop said the Tuscola man was found dead on his back porch, while the two in Buffalo Gap were found dead in their homes, which had lost electric service and had no heat.

Bishop described all three as elderly men.

Hypothermi­a can set in if the body loses heat faster than it can produce it and if the body temperatur­e falls below about 95 degrees. Normal body temperatur­e is about 98.6 degrees.

“After hours and hours, it leads to a very dangerous condition,” said Dr. Robert Glatter, an emergency physician at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

Matt Zavadsky, a spokesman for Fort Worth-area ambulance provider MedStar, said most of the hypothermi­a calls his agency received were from people in their own homes, where temperatur­es had fallen to 50 degrees or lower.

MedStar reached a peak Wednesday of 77 hypothermi­a calls, Zavadsky said. Some people reported numb hands and feet, while others had more severe symptoms.

“You had people who had been so cold for so long that they were shivering uncontroll­ably; they may have had a decreased level of consciousn­ess, which is not uncommon when you are in hypothermi­a for a prolonged period of time,” he said.

Some who were taken to hospitals had reached the point where they were no longer shivering, “which is a very bad sign,” Zavadsky said.

At first, the body will try to generate heat by shivering and boosting its heart rate. But if internal temperatur­es keep dropping, “those things start to slow down,” said Dr. Jeff Pothof, an emergency room doctor at University of Wisconsin Health in Madison. The body will restrict blood circulatio­n to extremitie­s to maintain blood in the core and keep internal organs warm.

Left untreated, hypothermi­a begins to affect the brain, making it hard to think clearly or move easily.

“You might not understand exactly what’s going on,” Pothof said. “And that’s a vicious cycle because you can’t take the action you need to.”

Some of the older people who died in Texas were found outside their homes. It wasn’t clear what prompted them to go outside.

Poor circulatio­n eventually prevents the heart, brain and other vital organs from functionin­g, leading to death. About 32 people die from the cold annually in the U.S., according to the National Weather Service.

Extended nighttime lows in the single digits — as experience­d by Texans last week — can be especially dangerous, Glatter said, since body temperatur­es naturally fall overnight.

“It can creep up on you,” he said, especially if confusion has begun to set in. “Your ability to think clearly is not as good, so it’s likely people won’t pick up on those signs and symptoms.”

Babies, children and older people are at the highest risk for hypothermi­a because of poor circulatio­n and temperatur­e regulation. Those with heart problems, asthma, emphysema, chronic lung disease and diabetes, and those who use tobacco are also vulnerable.

Some strategies for staying warm can be more hazardous than helpful.

Bundling up too much under blankets or layers of clothing can be dangerous if it leads to excessive sweating, which can pull heat away from the body.

And during weather-related power outages, people might use propane heaters, run generators or burn charcoal or wood indoors — all of which can lead to fires or deadly carbon monoxide poisoning.

“These are all setups for disaster,” Glatter said.

CARBON MONOXIDE

Louisiana authoritie­s Saturday confirmed two more fatalities tied to severe winter conditions, bringing the total deaths in the state to five.

The Louisiana Department of Health said a 68-year-old man and a 44-year-old woman died of carbon monoxide poisoning after a generator was placed in a camper where they sought shelter in Avoyelles Parish. The parish coroner confirmed the deaths as being storm-related, authoritie­s said.

State officials continue to warn residents not to use portable generators indoors. This includes garages, carports, basements and crawl spaces lacking ventilatio­n, the department said.

In Texas, the Cy-Fair Fire Department, which provides emergency services to the Cypress-Fairbanks area outside Houston in Harris County, reported Tuesday afternoon that over a 24-hour period at least 23 people, including 12 children, had been taken to hospitals for treatment of carbon monoxide poisoning.

All the incidents were because people were using charcoal grills to heat their homes in the bitter cold, the department said. It warned residents not to use gas ovens, or take outdoor grills and generators inside to heat their homes.

Carbon monoxide “is an odorless/colorless gas that can kill you,” the department said.

Matt Zavadsky, a spokesman for Fort Worth-area ambulance provider MedStar, said most of the hypothermi­a calls his agency received were from people in their own homes.

 ?? (The New York Times/Tamir Kalifa) ?? Savannah and Sam Peyton huddle in multiple layers under a sleeping bag Thursday night at their home in Austin, Texas, as their dog tries to join in. They had been without power since early Monday. Prolonged exposure can quickly lead to hypothermi­a, and dozens of deaths nationwide are being attributed to the frigid conditions and loss of power. More photos at arkansason­line.com/221usice/.
(The New York Times/Tamir Kalifa) Savannah and Sam Peyton huddle in multiple layers under a sleeping bag Thursday night at their home in Austin, Texas, as their dog tries to join in. They had been without power since early Monday. Prolonged exposure can quickly lead to hypothermi­a, and dozens of deaths nationwide are being attributed to the frigid conditions and loss of power. More photos at arkansason­line.com/221usice/.

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