October 1, 2007 10:00 AM
- Text
Global Warming May Boost Deaths
(WebMD)
Global warming may boost heat-related premature deaths,
new research suggests.
The researchers -- who included Columbia University's Kim Knowlton, PhD --
don't claim to know exactly how hot it's going to get.
But Knowlton's team predicts a rise in heat-related premature deaths in New
York state, based on two models of global warming.
Knowlton and colleagues checked summer temperatures and heat-related
premature deaths in New York state in the 1990s.
They also studied two sets of predictions about how hot New York will get
due to global warming in the 2050s.
Based on those figures, the researchers predict that in the 2050s, New
York's number of heat-related premature deaths will be an average 70% higher
than it was in the 1990s.
People might get used to those hotter temperatures, and that might curb the
increase in heat-related premature deaths by about 25%, the researchers also
estimate.
The researchers call their estimates "conservative," but they
caution that it's not yet clear how well people will adapt to hotter
summers.
The findings appear in the advance online edition of the American Journal
of Public Health.
By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang
B)2005-2006 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved
new research suggests.
The researchers -- who included Columbia University's Kim Knowlton, PhD --
don't claim to know exactly how hot it's going to get.
But Knowlton's team predicts a rise in heat-related premature deaths in New
York state, based on two models of global warming.
Knowlton and colleagues checked summer temperatures and heat-related
premature deaths in New York state in the 1990s.
They also studied two sets of predictions about how hot New York will get
due to global warming in the 2050s.
Based on those figures, the researchers predict that in the 2050s, New
York's number of heat-related premature deaths will be an average 70% higher
than it was in the 1990s.
People might get used to those hotter temperatures, and that might curb the
increase in heat-related premature deaths by about 25%, the researchers also
estimate.
The researchers call their estimates "conservative," but they
caution that it's not yet clear how well people will adapt to hotter
summers.
The findings appear in the advance online edition of the American Journal
of Public Health.
By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang
B)2005-2006 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved
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