No Heatwave Deaths Reported in Telangana Amid Intense Summer

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Hyderabad: It may sound strange but is true! Despite experiencing what could be the toughest spell of heat wave conditions that people of Telangana had to face in recent times, the health department has not reported any heatwave-related fatality this year.

Have the heatwave deaths miraculously ceased to exist or are the cases simply getting under-reported due to difficulties in the reporting system?

Barring sporadic spells of thundershowers, for a large part of the past three months, temperatures in Hyderabad, Rangareddy, Medchal-Malkajgiri, and other districts have consistently hovered between 40 degrees Celsius and 46 degrees Celsius. However, despite months of severe summer, not a single individual has died due to the heat wave in Telangana, according to state public health data.

A large section of patients who might have suffered symptoms due to heat wave during summer usually prefer private healthcare institutions like a nursing home, clinic, or private hospital. At present, there is no mechanism for sharing data of heat wave cases between private healthcare institutions and the public health department. This perennial problem of no data sharing could be a major factor for under-reporting.

There are two other major factors that dictate reporting of heat wave cases. The first is the possibility of issuing compensation to relatives of heat wave victims and the second one being the inherently complex procedure of confirming a heat wave death, especially among individuals with co-morbidities, according to senior public health officials and seasonal disease experts.

“Elderly persons with a history of diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, and kidney failure quite often become victims of the heat wave, even while remaining indoors. Similarly, infants and sick individuals also struggle to control their high temperatures internally. Such deaths are not categorized as heat strokes and they do not get reported or counted as heat deaths,” senior government doctors here said.

Seasonal disease experts in Hyderabad pointed out that it is extremely difficult in a government sector to define the death of an individual due to the heat wave.

“I believe that in urban centres, there was a lot of awareness on heat wave and people completely avoided venturing out. However, this was not the case in districts, where such cases went unreported,” a senior public health official in Hyderabad said.

Heat-related death: It is defined as a death in which exposure to high ambient temperature either caused the death or significantly contributed to it.

  • When body temperature at the time of collapse was more than 105 degrees F or more than 40.6 degrees C, then the cause of death should be heat stroke or hyperthermia.
  • A significant number of these deaths occur in persons having some preexisting disease.
  • Such deaths can be certified as heat-related, with the disease being considered a significant contributing condition, or vice versa.
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