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Extreme heat, the silent killer

Extreme heat, the silent killer

When a hurricane or wildfire takes lives, you hear about it. But another disaster, also born of climate change, quietly kills even more people: Heat waves.

Headlines From The Times · Anna M. Phillips, Denise Guerra, Melissa Kaplan, Alan Zarembo, Lauren Raab, Shani Hilton, Tony Barboza, Shannon Lin, Mario Diaz, Gustavo Arellano

November 3, 202119m 48s

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Show Notes

Every year, people in the American West die from scorching temperatures. Experts fear that the number of deaths is undercounted — and, that as the climate continues to heats up, the death rate is going to rise.

Officially, California says 599 people died due to heat exposure from 2010 to 2019. But a Los Angeles Times investigation estimates the number is way higher: about 3,900 deaths.

Today we talk to Tony Barboza and Anna M. Phillips, who, along with Sean Greene and Ruben Vives, spearheaded the L.A. Times investigation. We discuss why their count is so different from the state's, who's most vulnerable to the heat and how to protect yourself. 

More reading:

Heat waves are far deadlier than we think. How California neglects this climate threat

Climate change is supercharging California heat waves, and the state isn’t ready

Poor neighborhoods bear the brunt of extreme heat, ‘legacies of racist decision-making’

Topics

californiaair conditioningglobal warmingdeathpublic healthheat waveheatsafetyclimate changeheatstroke