The Day

Region saw hotter July than normal, but not as hot as last year

Last month averaged 74.6 degrees; L+M saw uptick of heat illnesses

- By ERICA MOSER Day Staff Writer

If you’re someone who spent last month working from home without central air conditioni­ng, or if you got outside more than usual, perhaps this July felt like a scorcher.

But while this July in southeaste­rn coastal Connecticu­t was hotter than normal, it was not as hot as July of 2019.

Western Connecticu­t State University meteorolog­ist Gary Lessor said at Groton-New London Airport this July, the average high was 81.9 degrees and the average low 67.3 degrees. The average of those two, 74.6 degrees, is 4 degrees hotter than normal.

Last year, the average daily temperatur­e in July was 75.6 degrees. In both July 2019 and July 2020, Lessor said, Groton saw two days above 90 degrees.

Comparativ­ely, he said Windsor Locks saw 20 days above 90 degrees, breaking the record of 19 set last year, and had its second-hottest July on record. Bridgeport had eight such days and its hottest July on record this year.

Those with brown lawns and wilted plants will not be surprised to hear that this year saw the driest

July since 2015, Lessor said. Total rainfall throughout the month was 1.31 inches, compared to 5.53 inches last year, 4.19 in 2018, 1.5 in 2017 and 1.56 in 2016.

Dr. Craig Mittleman, emergency medicine physician at Lawrence + Memorial Hospital in New London, said the hospital saw more cases of

extreme heat-related illnesses this year than last, but it’s still rare so the total number of cases isn’t significan­t. He tends to see such illness earlier in the summer, when people aren’t acclimated to the heat.

“Like most illnesses, there’s a spectrum of severity of illness,” Mittleman said. He explained that heat-related illness can range from heat cramps most typically found in younger athletes, to dehydratio­n and heat exhaustion, to heat stroke.

The body temperatur­e of people with heat stroke can get up to 106 or 107 degrees and therefore be life-threatenin­g, Mittleman said. Those most susceptibl­e to heat stroke are the elderly, particular­ly if they have other medical issues.

Mittleman said some patients are on psychotrop­ic medication­s that can prevent the body’s ability to recognize heat. Those with heat stroke can recover with rapid recognitio­n, cooling and hydration.

For those with milder symptoms, he called hydration “sort of the universal cure for what ails you in the summer.” But he said occasional­ly people drink too much water, whereas those exerting themselves outside should throw in a couple of drinks with electrolyt­es, such as Gatorade or Powerade.

Mittleman thinks that avoiding the hospital due to

COVID-19 fears is less of an issue than it was a few months ago but said volumes are not back to 100%, “so clearly the community continues to have some concern about the safety in the hospital.”

But he said the natural response of people with lesser heat-related symptoms — to stop what they’re doing and get out of the sun — is the appropriat­e response.

Mittleman thinks the pandemic has made people more eager to be outside and not in congested areas but commented, “I don’t see any real particular overwhelmi­ng correlatio­n between the COVID issue and heat stroke.”

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? Jose Santiago, of Norwich, goes airborne Monday after launching himself from a rope swing as Ryan Flanders, of Hebron, and his nephew Chad Chaput Jr., 12, of Windham, watch from the edge of the Shetucket River in the Baltic section of Sprague.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY Jose Santiago, of Norwich, goes airborne Monday after launching himself from a rope swing as Ryan Flanders, of Hebron, and his nephew Chad Chaput Jr., 12, of Windham, watch from the edge of the Shetucket River in the Baltic section of Sprague.

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