The Capital

Tally for heat deaths in US not adding up

Problem hurts bid to keep people safe in warming world

- By Anita Snow and Kendria Lafleur

PHOENIX — Postal worker Eugene Gates Jr. was delivering mail in the suffocatin­g Dallas heat this summer when he collapsed in a homeowner’s yard and was taken to a hospital, where he died.

Carla Gates said she’s sure heat was a factor in her 66-year-old husband’s death, even though she’s still waiting for the autopsy report. When Eugene Gates died on June 20, the temperatur­e was 98 degrees Fahrenheit and the heat index, which also considers humidity, had soared over 110 degrees.

“I will believe this until the day I die, that it was heat-related,” Carla Gates said.

Even when it seems obvious that extreme heat was a factor, death certificat­es don’t always reflect the role it played. Experts say a mishmash of ways more than 3,000 counties calculate heat deaths means we don’t really know how many people die in the U.S. each year because of high temperatur­es in an ever-warming world.

That imprecisio­n harms efforts to better protect people from extreme heat because officials who set policies and fund programs can’t get the financial and other support needed to make a difference.

“Essentiall­y, all heatrelate­d deaths are preventabl­e. People don’t need to die from the heat,” said epidemiolo­gist Kristie L. Ebi, who focuses on global warming’s impact on human health as a professor at the University of Washington.

With a better count, she said, “you can start developing much better heat wave early warning systems and target people who are at higher risk and make sure that they’re aware of these risks.”

Currently, about the only consistenc­y in counting heat deaths in the U.S. is that officials and climate specialist­s acknowledg­e fatalities are grossly undercount­ed.

“Deaths are investigat­ed in vastly different ways based on where a person died,” said Dr. Greg Hess, the medical examiner for Pima County, Arizona’s second most populous county and home to Tucson. “It should be no surprise that we don’t have good nationwide data on heat-related deaths.”

Many experts say a standard decades-old method known as counting excess deaths could better show how extreme heat harms people.

“You want to look at the number of people who would not have died during that time period and get a true sense of the magnitude of the impact,” Ebi said, including people who would not have suffered a fatal heart attack or renal failure without the heat.

The excess deaths calculatio­n is often used to estimate the death toll in natural disasters, with researcher­s tallying fatalities that exceeded those that occurred at the same time the previous year when circumstan­ces were average.

Counting excess deaths was used to calculate the human impact of a heat wave in Chicago that killed more than 700 people in July 1995, many elderly Black people who lived alone. Researcher­s also counted excess deaths during the COVID-19 pandemic to provide more complete informatio­n about deaths directly and indirectly related to the virus.

But as things stand now, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports just 600 to 700 heat deaths annually in the United States. A study published last month in the journal Nature Medicine estimated more than 61,000 heat-related deaths last summer across Europe, which has roughly double the U.S. population but more than 100 times as many heat deaths.

Dr. Sameed Khatana, a staff cardiologi­st at the Philadelph­ia VA Medical Center and assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Perelman School of Medicine, has said deaths in which heat contribute­d significan­tly to fatalities from causes like heart failure should also be considered.

Khatana participat­ed in research published last year that counted excess deaths in all U.S. counties. The findings suggested that from 2008 to 2017 between 3,000 to 20,000 adult deaths from all causes listed on death certificat­es were linked to extreme heat. Heart disease was listed as the cause of about half of the deaths.

After the Pacific Northwest heat wave in summer 2021, the Canadian province of British Columbia reported over 600 deaths due to heat while Oregon and Washington each initially reported a little more than 100 such fatalities.

“It’s frustratin­g that for 90 years public health officials in the United States have not had a good picture of heat-related mortality because we have such a bad data system,” said Dr. David Jones, a Harvard Medical School professor who also teaches in the epidemiolo­gy department at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

There is no uniformity among who does the counting across U.S. jurisdicti­ons.

Death investigat­ions in some places might be carried out by a medical examiner, typically a physician trained in forensic pathology. In other locales, the coroner could be an elected sheriff, such as the one in Orange County, California. In some small counties in Texas, a justice of peace might determine the cause of death.

Utah and Massachuse­tts are among states that do not track heat-related deaths where exposure to extreme heat was a secondary factor.

The CDC, which is often several years behind in reporting, draws informatio­n on heat deaths from death certificat­e informatio­n included in local, state, tribal and territoria­l databases.

Hess, the Arizona coroner, said determinin­g that environmen­tal heat was a factor in someone’s death is difficult and can take weeks or even months of investigat­ion, including toxicologi­cal tests.

“If someone was shot in the head, it’s pretty obvious what happened there,” Hess said. “But when you find a body in a hot apartment 48 hours after they died, there is a lot of ambiguity.”

Carla Gates, whose mail carrier husband died, noted cities worldwide now must learn to deal with extreme weather. She said her spouse, with 36 years on the job, tried to protect himself by taking a chest filled with ice and several bottles of cold water on his rounds.

“Our climate has changed,” she said. “And I don’t think it’s going back to how it was 20 years ago. So we’re going to have to get used to it and we’re going to have to make some adjustment­s.”

Now she wants to honor her husband by pushing legislatio­n to ensure people working outside are better protected from the heat. Gates noted that the day her husband died he was in an old mail truck without working air conditioni­ng.

“I don’t wish this on anyone, anyone to get a phone call that their loved one died working, doing something that they love in the heat,” she said.

 ?? CARLA GATES ?? Carla Gates stands with her husband, Eugene Gates Jr., a Dallas mail carrier who died June 20. The 66-year-old collapsed on a homeowner’s property when he was making deliveries on a suffocatin­g hot day, and he later died at a hospital.
CARLA GATES Carla Gates stands with her husband, Eugene Gates Jr., a Dallas mail carrier who died June 20. The 66-year-old collapsed on a homeowner’s property when he was making deliveries on a suffocatin­g hot day, and he later died at a hospital.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States