Extreme heat events pose a serious danger to people throughout the United States. Studies conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have shown that exposure to extreme heat can increase discomfort and fatigue, cause heat cramps, and increase emergency room visits and hospitalizations. It can also kill. From 1999 through 2009, extreme heat exposure caused or contributed to more than 7,800 deaths in the United States. Extreme heat is a real danger to human health that will become worse with time. Experts project that as our climate changes, extreme heat events in the United States will become more frequent, longer lasting, and more severe. By the end of this century, extremely high temperatures that currently occur onc...
By definition, extreme events are rare. Socio-economic and human systems have not experienced advers...
Heat-related deaths and illness are preventable yet annually many people succumb to extreme heat. Hi...
Climate change can increase the risk of conditions that exceed human thermoregulatory capacity1,2,3,...
Extreme heat events, or heat waves, are a leading cause of extreme weather-related deaths in the Uni...
Climate change poses many risks to human health. Some health impacts of climate change are already b...
Extreme weather and climate events, such as heat waves, cyclones, and floods, are an expression of c...
Climate change has produced extreme weather effects including prolonged and severe heat waves in reg...
Heat causes more deaths in the U.S. than any other natural hazard – more than floods, hurricanes, or...
High ambient temperatures and the associated heat stress can increase morbidity and mortality, and i...
High ambient temperatures and the associated heat stress can increase morbidity and mortality, and i...
Extreme heat events impact people and ecosystems across the globe, and they are becoming more freque...
Heat is a dangerous hazard that causes acute heat illness, chronic disease exacerbations, adverse pr...
The purpose of this toolkit is to provide information to local governments and public health profess...
The recent increases in global temperature have marked a critical milestone in the history of Earth....
In the United States, extreme heat is the most deadly weather-related hazard. In the face of a warmi...
By definition, extreme events are rare. Socio-economic and human systems have not experienced advers...
Heat-related deaths and illness are preventable yet annually many people succumb to extreme heat. Hi...
Climate change can increase the risk of conditions that exceed human thermoregulatory capacity1,2,3,...
Extreme heat events, or heat waves, are a leading cause of extreme weather-related deaths in the Uni...
Climate change poses many risks to human health. Some health impacts of climate change are already b...
Extreme weather and climate events, such as heat waves, cyclones, and floods, are an expression of c...
Climate change has produced extreme weather effects including prolonged and severe heat waves in reg...
Heat causes more deaths in the U.S. than any other natural hazard – more than floods, hurricanes, or...
High ambient temperatures and the associated heat stress can increase morbidity and mortality, and i...
High ambient temperatures and the associated heat stress can increase morbidity and mortality, and i...
Extreme heat events impact people and ecosystems across the globe, and they are becoming more freque...
Heat is a dangerous hazard that causes acute heat illness, chronic disease exacerbations, adverse pr...
The purpose of this toolkit is to provide information to local governments and public health profess...
The recent increases in global temperature have marked a critical milestone in the history of Earth....
In the United States, extreme heat is the most deadly weather-related hazard. In the face of a warmi...
By definition, extreme events are rare. Socio-economic and human systems have not experienced advers...
Heat-related deaths and illness are preventable yet annually many people succumb to extreme heat. Hi...
Climate change can increase the risk of conditions that exceed human thermoregulatory capacity1,2,3,...