Houston Chronicle

Cold snap fatal

Illinois alone reports over 200 cases of frostbite, hypothermi­a

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The dangerous cold and heavy snow retreats but exacts a human toll: more than two dozen deaths attributed to weather in eight states and hundreds of injuries.

CHICAGO — The dangerous cold and heavy snow that hobbled the northern U.S. this week has retreated, but not before exacting a human toll: more than two dozen weather-related deaths in eight states and hundreds of injuries, including frostbite, broken bones, heart attacks and carbon monoxide poisoning.

In Illinois alone, hospitals reported more than 220 cases of frostbite and hypothermi­a since Tuesday, when the polar vortex moved in and overnight temperatur­es plunged to minus 30 or lower — with wind chills of minus 50 or worse in some areas.

Hennepin Healthcare in Minneapoli­s normally sees around 30 frostbite patients in an entire winter. It admitted 28 in the past week, spokeswoma­n Christine Hill said Friday.

“I definitely saw more frostbite than I’ve ever seen in my entire career just in the last three days,” said Dr. Andrea Rowland-Fischer, an emergency department physician at Hennepin Healthcare.

Most of those patients, she said, had underlying problems that made it difficult for them to take care of themselves: the developmen­tally delayed, the mentally ill, the very young and the very old. They also included people with injuries related to drugs and alcohol — people who passed out or did not realize they were cold or injured.

“It’s heartbreak­ing when there are people who can’t take care of themselves and get exposed, just because they either escape from the care that they’re being given or because they’re not being supervised.”

Others got frostbite on their way to work after being exposed to the cold for a short time — including on their hands, feet, ears and face. That included people whose cars wouldn’t start or who got stuck outside for other reasons, as well as those who just didn’t think they could get frostbitte­n so quickly and went outside without gloves or other protective gear.

Several required “maximal treatment,” admission to the hospital’s burn unit for therapies that include drugs to restore circulatio­n to try to avoid amputation­s. Some of them will probably still require amputation­s, a decision usually made by burn doctors four to 10 days after the injury.

In western Michigan, a health care system’s online service saw a major spike this week.

More than 400 people over four days used Spectrum Health’s MedNow to see a nurse practition­er or a physician’s assistant about nonemergen­cy issues, such as aches, rashes, cold and flu, said Joe Brennan, MedNow senior director. Most used an app on their phone. The usual four-day volume is 250.

Another danger was from carbon monoxide. A family of nine in Wheeling, Ill., was taken to local hospitals after heating their home with a charcoal grill. In Rockford, Ill., four people were treated because they had warmed up cars in a closed garage or because a furnace vent became blocked by ice and snow.

 ?? Colleen McGrath / The Herald-Mail via Associated Press ?? Charles High of Greencastl­e, Pa., shovels snow. Crippling low temperatur­es hobbled the northern U.S. this week, with hundreds of people suffering frostbite or broken bones from slipping on ice.
Colleen McGrath / The Herald-Mail via Associated Press Charles High of Greencastl­e, Pa., shovels snow. Crippling low temperatur­es hobbled the northern U.S. this week, with hundreds of people suffering frostbite or broken bones from slipping on ice.

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