Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Millions more older adults will experience extreme heat by 2050

- By Miriam Fauzia The Dallas Morning News

Almost a quarter of adults age 69 and older may experience dangerous levels of heat worldwide by the mid-century, up from 14% today, according to a new study.

The study, which was published last week in the journal Nature Communicat­ions , projects that by 2050 there will be as many as 246 million more older adults exposed to extreme heat, defined as exceeding 99.5 degrees Fahrenheit. The most severe temperatur­es will be in the Global South, such as in Asia and Africa, though temperatur­es in North America are also expected to rise.

The projection­s emphasize an urgent need for policies and infrastruc­tures to protect communitie­s from the increased heat risk, said Giacomo Falchetta, the study’s first author and a researcher at the Euromedite­rranean Center on Climate Change in Italy.

In a similar study coauthored by Falchetta and published in March, some parts of Texas were identified as vulnerable hotspots with both rising temperatur­es and a growing population of older adults. These areas included parts of Central Texas and rural communitie­s in the southwest of the state. North Texas is projected to get hotter over the coming decades, but the aging population isn’t expected to grow as dramatical­ly.

The number of Texans age 65 and older is expected to double over the next few decades — from 3.9 million in 2020 to 8.3 million by 2050. And triple-digit highs are expected to become the summertime norm for the state by 2036, according to a report by Texas 2036, a nonpartisa­n think tank. The extreme temperatur­es are threatenin­g vulnerable population­s in the Dallasfort Worth area, widening socioecono­mic inequities and challengin­g the state’s emergency and health services.

Extreme heat is concerning for everyone but especially for older adults, said Dr. Angela Catic, an associate professor of geriatrics and palliative medicine at Baylor College of Medicine. Catic was not involved in either study.

“Older adults are more prone to heat stress and a lot of that is because of their chronic conditions, especially things like cardiovasc­ular disease, diabetes, renal disease, kidney disease, obesity and medication­s that they take,” she said. “And then a lot of our older adults have cognitive and functional decline,” which can make it harder to understand the risk of heat or to take necessary precaution­s.

Medication­s like those used to treat high blood pressure, heart disease, mood disorders and neurodegen­erative conditions like Parkinson’s disease interfere with the body’s ability to cool itself, an ability that typically declines with age, Catic said.

Even for healthy-seeming older adults, prolonged heat exposure could turn small, lurking health problems into larger, more devastatin­g ones, said Karrie Curry, an assistant professor in the department of personaliz­ed health and well-being at the University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth. Curry was not involved in either study.

“In a normal person, when you’re exposed to higher heat or if you’re chronicall­y hot, you do have a higher heart rate even at rest, which if you have plaque buildup or underlying stages of cardiovasc­ular disease, that’s going to elevate your blood pressure even more,” she said.

In the latest study, Falchetta and his colleagues in Boston, Austria and Italy projected how different age groups will grow around the world. The projection­s were mapped onto a climate model that predicts what the Earth’s climate will be like in 2050.

The researcher­s then looked at two types of heat exposure: acute, or when extreme temperatur­es are brief, such as with a heat wave; and chronic, or when there are prolonged periods of uncomforta­ble heat, defined as more than 75 degrees Fahrenheit.

Falchetta and his colleagues projected that chronic heat exposure will increase globally by 2050. And, on average, the number of days where high temperatur­es exceed 99.5 degrees Fahrenheit will double, from 10 to around 20 days.

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