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Report finds that Europe will have over 62 700 heat-related deaths by 2024.

According to a study published on Monday in Nature Medicine, more than 62 700 people will die in Europe due to heat-related deaths in 2024. The majority of these deaths will be women and elderly people.

Researchers at the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), who collected daily mortality data from 32 European countries and estimated that over 181,000 people would die from heat-related complications during the summer months 2022-2024.

The mortality rate between June 1 and 30 September 2024 increased by 23% compared to the same period one year prior, but the number of deaths remained just below 67,900 in 2022, which was the first year studied.

Tomas Janos is the lead author. He said, "This number tells us that we need to start adapting our population."

The hottest summer on record in Europe

According to the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service, the summer of 2024 will be the hottest ever recorded in Europe.

In Southern Europe, two-thirds were estimated to have died. Italy, with Europe's highest proportion of elderly people, experienced the highest death toll in each summer.

The Italian Society for Emergency Medicine reported that emergency room admissions in some regions rose up to 20 percent during the peak temperatures of this year. This indicates that the country still struggles with heat risks for the elderly.

Alessandro Riccardi said that patients who were already frail or suffering from multiple illnesses required more hospital care. This increased the pressure on hospital services as it happens during influenza outbreaks.

Heat warnings are increasingly issued by European health authorities when temperatures will likely meet the official definitions for a heatwave, which vary from one country to another.

Janos said, however, that heat-related deaths are noticeable for some populations at temperatures as low 24 degrees Celsius (75.2degF).

Protecting yourself from heat should be a 'essential medicine'

Gerardo Sanchez is a member of the World Health Organization expert group that has been rewriting the heat health guidelines. He said the data on heat related deaths should be matched with long-term investments to improve Europe's built-in infrastructure and access cooling.

Sanchez said that heat protection is essential for those who need it most.

ISGlobal admitted that it underestimated the number of heat-related deaths in 2022 and 2023. The figures were based on weekly records and not daily ones. They revised their estimates upwards. Reporting by Alison Withers, editing by Barbara Lewis

(source: Reuters)