Record-setting Texas heat sends hundreds of
people to emergency rooms
Emergency medical providers respond to heat-related
illnesses as extreme temperatures become more frequent and prolonged
Martha
Pskowski and Gina Jiménez for Inside Climate News
Wed 28 Jun
2023 11.42 EDT
Record-setting
heat in Texas has sent hundreds of people to emergency rooms in recent weeks,
according to state health officials.
Temperature
records fell across Texas during the last two weeks, putting June 2023 on pace
to be the hottest June ever in some parts of the state. From the border city of
Del Rio to the capital city, Austin, temperatures hit triple digits for days
straight.
Emergency
medical providers are responding to heat-related illnesses as extreme
temperatures become more frequent and prolonged. On 20 June, at least 350
people visited emergency departments across Texas because of heat illnesses,
according to state health officials. That was the highest number of ER visits
for heat-related illnesses on any single day in 2022 or 2023 so far. Not all
hospitals and clinics are included in the state data, so the total is probably
an undercount.
Emergency
Medical Services (EMS) in Texas cities also reported high numbers of calls for
heat-related illnesses this month. Houston EMS fielded 416 calls related to
heat illnesses in the first 23 days of June. Even Texans accustomed to hot
weather have been taken aback by the dangerous conditions.
“We are on
pace to beat our numbers from last June,” said Austin-Travis county EMS
paramedic and spokesperson Christa Stedman. “And that was the hottest June on
record.”
Hotter summers linked to climate change have a deadly
toll in Texas
Chris
Mendoza once landed in the hospital with heatstroke from working inside a food
truck. After that experience, he set a rule for the food truck he now owns in
El Paso, Star Burgers & Fries, which serves Star Wars-themed hamburgers.
“Once the internal temperature of the truck hits 140F, we have to shut down,”
he said.
On Monday,
the high temperature in the desert city was 110F; inside the food truck was
even hotter. That evening he suspended service for an hour because it was too
hot to work safely. “I’d rather lose a customer than make a burger, because I
care more about people’s health than the profit,” Mendoza said.
The heatwave
has posed a health risk to millions of Texans, especially those who work
outside or are homeless. While final autopsies are still pending, several
deaths have already been linked to the extreme heat. A utility lineman died on
19 June in east Texas after he had been treated for a heat-related illness. A
Dallas postal worker died on 20 June. The next day, a 17-year-old died after
collapsing at a state park outside Amarillo. A 14-year-old male hiker died on
23 June in Big Bend national park, where temperatures topped 119F, and his
stepfather died when he crashed his vehicle seeking help.
Emergency
responders have also found several deceased individuals in the desert along the
US-Mexico border in recent days. Since 22 June, five bodies have been recovered
in Sunland Park, New Mexico, just over the border from Texas and a common
crossing point for migrants in the El Paso and Juárez area. The causes of death
and individuals’ identities have not been disclosed.
Climate
change made the extreme heatwave more likely to occur, according to the Climate
Shift Index, a tool developed by the science non-profit Climate Central to
estimate how much more likely a specific weather event is because of climate
change.
The Climate
Shift Index analyzes the temperatures of a 31-day period surrounding a specific
date in our current climate. Andrew Pershing, vice-president for science at
Climate Central, said the organization then removes the signal of global
warming to assess how frequent those temperatures would be in a world where
“humans hadn’t put a lot of things in the atmosphere and warmed things up”.
The recent
heatwave scored five, meaning it was five or more times likelier because of
climate change. “At that level, you are looking at an event that is highly,
highly unlikely without climate change,” Pershing said.
Last year,
a study found one additional day of extreme heat, or with a heat index of over
90F, was associated with a 0.07 increase in the mortality rate.
According
to a Texas Tribune analysis, at least 279 people died due to heat in Texas
during 2022 and roughly half were residents of another state or country, who
most likely died after crossing the US-Mexico border. The analysis found heat
deaths in 2021 and 2022 in Texas surpassed recent years, including 2011, when
the state experienced historically hot and dry conditions.
The
scorching start to summer 2023 means that heat-related deaths could continue to
rise.
Emergency medical professionals respond to more
heat-related illnesses
Emergency
room doctors and emergency medical technicians across the state are treating
patients with symptoms of heatstroke or exhaustion.
On 20 June,
the Texas Syndromic Surveillance system, which includes data from 80% of the
state’s hospitals, recorded approximately 350 people who visited an emergency
department because of the heat. Also on 20 June, the heat-related illness rate
in Texas surpassed 1,000, meaning that at least one in every 100 ER visits was
heat-related, according to the CDC’s Heat & Health Tracker.
Auden
Velasquez, a family doctor at Pecos county memorial hospital in Fort Stockton,
said West Texans were generally prepared for extreme heat. “It’s something that
we expect and people are smart about it,” Velasquez said. “But certain people
don’t have the option of getting out of the sun, like oilfield workers or construction
workers.”
High
temperatures in Fort Stockton, midway between El Paso and San Antonio, have
fluctuated between 100F and 110F for the past week. Velasquez said the hospital
also treats patients who have crossed the US-Mexico border and are brought in
by the border patrol after they suffered heat illnesses.
EMS
providers across the state have reported high numbers of heat-related 911 calls
this month. Houston EMS responded to 416 heat-related calls between 1 June and
23 June. San Antonio EMS fielded 234 calls for heat-related health problems
between 1 June and 25 June, compared with 163 during the same period in 2022.
Calls spiked during the week of 19 June, when 98 people sought aid for
heat-related illness.
Christa
Stedman of Austin-Travis county EMS said the department responds to other
heat-related incidents that do not show up in that statistic. For example, if a
bystander calls 911 for an unconscious person outdoors, the initial report may
not be classified as heat-related, even if the medics later determine that cause.
The true
health toll of the Texas heatwave is still coming into focus. But with a long
summer ahead, the necessity of preparing for extreme heat is clear.
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