The Guardian (USA)

Deadliest summer for heat-related deaths in Arizona’s biggest county

- Associated Press

This summer was the deadliest on record for heat-related deathsin Arizona’s largest county, with public health statistics this week confirming 359 such deaths just days before the end of the six-month heat season.

The jump comes amid a growing homelessne­ss crisis in the area and raises questions about how to better protect vulnerable people in the desert south-west as temperatur­es soar.

Climate change has fueled more intense, frequent and enduring heat waves that can regularly hit triple digits.

According to the National Weather Service, the highest temperatur­e recorded this year at Phoenix Sky Harbor internatio­nal airport was 115F (46.1C) on 11 July, with the mercury hitting 114F (45.5C) on 11 June and 16 and 22 July.

Maricopa county’s heat-associated fatalities this year have outpaced the 339 deaths confirmed in 2021 and the final number could be higher still, with another 91 deaths still under investigat­ion.

The county has more than a decade of experience tracking heat deaths, but comparable figures are hard to come by in other areas such as the Pacific Northwest, which has only experience­d intense heat waves in recent years.

In California, researcher­s have found that unsheltere­d people, especially those with a mental illness, were significan­tly more likely to end up in the hospital during extreme heat than housed people, based on a study of emergency room admissions.

Nearly 80% of the heat-associated deaths in Maricopa county this year occurred outdoors, but the preliminar­y heat reports for this year don’t estimate how many of the deaths were among the homeless rather than people who were working outside or were outdoors for other reasons.

But the increase comes at a time whenhundre­ds of people are sleeping in tents around downtown Phoenix amid soaring rents and evictions.

“With so many more homeless people, it makes sense that more would die in the heat,” said Amy Schwabenle­nder, executive director of the Human Services Campus in downtown Phoenix that brings together agencies assisting homeless people.

She said about 900 individual­s currently stay at shelters on the campus, with about 1,000 more in tents on the streets outside the fenced property. There were an estimated 300 people sleeping just outside the campus a year ago.

Informatio­n about the role that substance use played in this year’s heatassoci­ated deaths is not yet available.

But last year, substance use was a factor in 60% of those fatalities in Maricopa county. Methamphet­amine was found in 91% of the deaths involving drugs, and fentanyl, an opioid, was found in 30%. While fentanyl is more likely to result in overdose, meth can create changes to the body that make a user more vulnerable to the heat, heightenin­g the blood pressure, heart and respirator­y rate. Homeless people accounted for 38% of the deaths involving drugs in 2021.

Men, African Americans, Indigenous Americans and those ages 75 and over had the highest rates of heatassoci­ated deaths in the county in 2021.

David Hondula, director of the yearold Office of Heat Response and Mitigation for the city of the Phoenix, said in a report to City Council last week that his team is studying the numbers to understand what is behind the increase in deaths and how to plan for next summer.

Hondula said heat-related calls for assistance to the Phoenix fire department over the summer were expected to end up at least 10-20% above 2021.

 ?? July. Photograph: Ross D Franklin/AP ?? A Salvation Army volunteer hands out water bottles at a heat relief station in Phoenix in
July. Photograph: Ross D Franklin/AP A Salvation Army volunteer hands out water bottles at a heat relief station in Phoenix in

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