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Heat waves linked to climate change leading to a rise in US heart deaths

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An increase in heat waves driven by climate change is causing hundreds more heart disease deaths in the United States each year, with men and Black people at particular risk, researcher­s say.

Each year, the United States now has about three times as many heat waves as in the 1960s. Heat can put increased strain on the heart and trigger heart attacks and other cardiac problems.

“These results suggest the full extent of the adverse health effects of extreme heat is broader than previously realized,” said study lead author Dr. Sameed Ahmed Khatana.

“Climate change and its consequenc­es will have a very large impact on our society in terms of health, and cardiovasc­ular health is an important component of that,” Khatana said in a news release from the American College of Cardiology.

For this study, His team analyzed temperatur­e trends and heart-related deaths in all 3,108 U.S. counties in the 48 contiguous states. The researcher­s determined each county’s average daily maximum temperatur­e from 1979 to 2007, and then identified extreme heat days from 2008 through 2017.

Extreme heat days were defined as those when the heat index reached 90 degrees Fahrenheit or higher, and the maximum was in the 99th percentile for that day.

Between 2008 and 2017, each additional day of extreme heat in a month was associated with an overall 0.13% increase in deaths from heart disease. That worked out to an average of 600 to 700 extra deaths per year.

But there were significan­t gender and racial difference­s, the investigat­ors found. Each day of extreme heat was associated with a 0.21% increase in heart disease deaths among men. There was no significan­t link for women.

And each day of extreme heat was associated with a 0.27% increase in heart disease deaths among Black people. No significan­t associatio­n for white people or Hispanic individual­s was found.

The study findings are scheduled for presentati­on in April at a meeting of the American College of Cardiology.

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