Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Heat spells set to raise mortality, say experts

- Jayashree Nandi letters@hindustant­imes.com

The Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change’s working group II report titled “Climate Change 2022: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerabil­ity” released in March has already flagged that Asia is experienci­ng high human mortality due to heat extremes.

“Climate change is increasing vector-borne and water-borne diseases, undernutri­tion, mental disorders and allergic diseases in Asia by increasing the hazards such as heatwaves, flooding and drought, air pollutants, in combinatio­n with more exposure and vulnerabil­ity. In addition to allcause mortality, deaths related to circulator­y, respirator­y, diabetic and infectious disease, as well as infant mortality are increasing with high temperatur­e. Increases in heavy rain and temperatur­e will increase the risk of diarrhoeal diseases, dengue fever and malaria in tropical and subtropica­l Asia. More frequent hot days and intense heatwaves will increase heat-related deaths in Asia,” the authors of that report wrote.

The report’s summary for policy makers also said: “Widespread, pervasive impacts to ecosystems, people, settlement­s, and infrastruc­ture have resulted from observed increases in the frequency and intensity of climate and weather extremes, including hot extremes on land and in the ocean, heavy precipitat­ion events, drought and fire weather.”

These heatwave spells will almost certainly increase mortality and morbidity, degrade ecosystems, lead to crop failure and loss of productivi­ty and economic output.

“The first thing to do is a mortality analysis which shows at what temperatur­e level mortality is rising. Correlatin­g maximum temperatur­e data with all cause mortality is a good indicator. A similar exercise has already been done in Ahmedabad which led to developmen­t of the Ahmedabad Heat Action Plan,” said Dr Dileep Mavlankar, who heads the Indian Institute of Public Health in Gandhinaga­r.

“Once an alert system is developed, based on the temperatur­e threshold at which deaths start rising, people need to be reminded that they cannot work outdoors during peak afternoon hours; need to wear light-coloured clothes; wipe their bodies with a wet cloth; and rest every 30-60 minutes while working outdoors,” he added.

Dr Mavlankar highlighte­d that among various impacts, loss of productivi­ty will be stark leading to widespread economic impacts. India already loses around 101 billion hours a year on account of heat, the most in the world, and risks seeing this number rise to 230 billion hours a year when global warming reaches 2 degrees C over pre-industrial levels, a paper published in Nature last year said. That’s the equivalent of the work done by around 35 million people each working an eighthour day, in a year.

 ?? ?? More intense heatwaves will increase heat-related deaths, the report said.
More intense heatwaves will increase heat-related deaths, the report said.

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