(HealthDay)—Hospital admissions for heat-related health problems increase in northern states long before heat alerts are issued, and these higher admission rates occur at lower temperatures than in the South, where people are more used to heat, the Associated Press reported.
The findings, published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggest that heat alerts in northern states are not being issued early enough, Renee Salas, M.D., M.P.H., an emergency medicine physician and researcher at the Harvard Global Health Institute in Boston, told the news service. The study is important in a warming world where the problem of heat illness is only going to get worse, said Salas, who was not part of the study.
In the study, U.S. government researchers analyzed hospital admissions for heat-related illnesses in 22 states over a decade. They found an average of 36,000 such hospitalizations each summer.
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