NY Times - Global warming is accelerating — the last three years have been the warmest on record — and future heat waves are projected to be longer, as well as more frequent and severe. In New York City, where it’s hotter than the rest of the state and more than a quarter of residents live in poverty, extreme heat can expose a trifecta of crises: housing, energy affordability and climate change.
For low-income residents with health conditions, heat waves can be especially dangerous, said Earle Chambers, an epidemiologist at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx.
“Extreme heat can affect people with cardiovascular health issues, chronic kidney disease or anything that is exacerbated by dehydration,” Dr. Chambers said. And heat-related health care costs, such as emergency room visits, can leave people with less to spend on essentials like child care or rent, worsening an already precarious situation, he said.
“We wanted to get a full national picture,” said Anne Weir Schechinger, the report’s author. “And the sheer size of the numbers—there are over 62 million people impacted by this—I was not expecting that.”
The government set the legal limit of nitrate in water at 10 milligrams per liter in the early 1960s to help prevent cases of “blue baby” syndrome, a condition in which infants have low levels of blood oxygen. But research has since found that concentrations at 5 milligrams per liter and even lower are linked to colorectal and other cancers, thyroid disease and birth defects. Health advocates have pushed for lowering the limit, but the Environmental Protection Agency has yet to do so. The Trump administration gutted the division that would continue a review process started under the Biden administration, Schechinger noted.
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